Ganoderic acid A ameliorates non-alcoholic streatohepatitis (NASH) induced by high-fat high-cholesterol diet in mice

Exp Ther Med. 2022 Apr;23(4):308. doi: 10.3892/etm.2022.11237. Epub 2022 Feb 24.

Abstract

Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is becoming a huge global health problem. Previous studies have revealed that ganoderic acids have hepatoprotective and hypocholesterolemic effects. In the present study, to evaluate the anti-NASH activity of ganoderic acid A (GAA), male 6-week-old C57BL/6J mice were divided into the following four groups, which were administered different diets: Normal diet (ND group), high-fat high-cholesterol diet (HFHC group), HFHC diet supplemented with 25 mg/kg/day (GAAL group) or 50 mg/kg/day of GAA (GAAH group). After 12 weeks of GAA treatment, histopathological results revealed that compared with that of the HFHC group, GAA significantly inhibited fat accumulation, steatosis, inflammation and fibrosis in the liver. GAA effectively reduced serum aspartate transaminase and alanine transaminase levels compared with the HFHC model. Furthermore, the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress-responsive proteins, including glucose-regulated protein 78, phosphorylated (p)-eukaryotic initiation factor-2α and p-JNK, were significantly suppressed by GAA, while ERp57, p-MAPK and p-AKT were significantly increased after GAA treatment. Taken together, it was concluded that GAA could resist HFHC diet-induced NASH. In terms of its underlying mechanism, GAA could improve liver inflammation and fibrosis by inhibiting hepatic oxidative stress and the ER stress response induced by HFHC.

Keywords: endoplasmic reticulum stress; ganoderic acid A; high-fat high-cholesterol diet; inflammation; non-alcoholic streatohepatitis.

Grants and funding

Funding: The present study was supported by the Medical Health Science and Technology Project of Zhejiang Province (grant no. 2019RC069), the Program of Zhejiang University of traditional Chinese Medicine (grant no. 2018ZY24) and the Science and Technology Development Program of Nanjing Medical University (grant no. 2017NJMU086). The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.