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Journal of Gastroenterology 2017-Aug

Fatty acids in a high-fat diet potentially induce gastric parietal-cell damage and metaplasia in mice.

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Yuki Hirata
Takuhito Sezaki
Miwa Tamura-Nakano
Chinatsu Oyama
Teruki Hagiwara
Takamasa Ishikawa
Shinji Fukuda
Kazuhiko Yamada
Kazuhide Higuchi
Taeko Dohi

Nøgleord

Abstrakt

BACKGROUND

Obesity is associated with risk of adenocarcinoma in the proximal stomach. We aimed to identify the links between dietary fat and gastric premalignant lesions.

METHODS

C57BL/6 mice were fed high fat diet (HFD), and gastric mucosa was histologically analysed. Morphological changes were also analysed using an electron microscope. Transcriptome analysis of purified parietal cells was performed, and non-parietal gastric corpus epithelial cells were subjected to single-cell gene-expression profiling. Composition of gastric contents of HFD-fed mice was compared with that of the HFD itself. Lipotoxicity of free fatty acids (FFA) was examined in primary culture and organoid culture of mouse gastric epithelial cells in vitro, as well as in vivo, feeding FFA-rich diets.

RESULTS

During ~8-20 weeks of HFD feeding, the parietal cells of the stomach displayed mitochondrial damage, and a total of 23% of the mice developed macroscopically distinct metaplastic lesions in the gastric corpus mucosa. Transcriptome analysis of parietal cells indicated that feeding HFD enhanced pathways related to cell death. Histological analysis and gene-expression profiling indicated that the lesions were similar to previously reported precancerous lesions identified as spasmolytic polypeptide-expressing metaplasia. FFAs, including linoleic acid with refluxed bile acids were detected in the stomachs of the HFD-fed mice. In vitro, FFAs impaired mitochondrial function and decreased the viability of parietal cells. In vivo, linoleic acid-rich diet, but not stearic acid-rich diet induced parietal-cell loss and metaplastic changes in mice.

CONCLUSIONS

Dietary lipids induce parietal-cell damage and may lead to the development of precancerous metaplasia.

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