4.7 Article

Cholesterol and fat in diet disrupt bone and tooth homeostasis in mice

期刊

BIOMEDICINE & PHARMACOTHERAPY
卷 156, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER FRANCE-EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopha.2022.113940

关键词

Tooth; Fat; Cholesterol; Bone; Osteoclast

资金

  1. Private University Research Branding Project of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan (MEXT)
  2. Industry to Support Private Universities Building up Their Foundations of Strategic Research of MEXT [S1411009, S1201014, S0801016]
  3. Fund for the Promotion of Joint International Research [JP19KK0233]
  4. JSBMR Rising Stars Grant
  5. [JP24659830]
  6. [JP26293398]
  7. [JP25293066]
  8. [JP17K11993]
  9. [JP18K09866]
  10. [JP21K1070]
  11. [JP21K06255]
  12. [JP20K18465]
  13. [JP19K19035]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that a diet high in both fat and cholesterol can induce bone loss, while diets high in fat or cholesterol alone do not affect bone mass.
Dyslipidemia is a condition of high levels of triglycerides and cholesterol in the blood, and high levels of cholesterol is associated with a variety of systemic diseases. The effects of a high-fat diet on bone have been reported, however, it is not clear which components of a high-fat diet affect bone. This study was conducted to examine the effects of dietary lipids and cholesterol on bone homeostasis maintenance. Eight-week-old male mice (C57BL/6 J) were fed five types of feed with different amounts of fat (14 %, 36 %) and cholesterol (0.01 %, 1.25 %, 5 %) for 12 weeks. Blood, femur, tibia, and tooth samples were examined, and serum lipid markers and bone morphology were determined using mu CT and histological analysis. Additionally, bone marrow cells were obtained and cultured, and osteoclast differentiation markers analyzed using qPCR. Mice fed a diet high in both fat (36 %) and cholesterol (1.25 %) showed increased total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein levels in blood, and decreased bone volume fraction as compared to the standard diet group. However, bone mass was unaffected in the high fat only (36 %) and high cholesterol only (1.25 %, 5 %) groups. Mice given a high fat (36%) diet also demonstrated significantly narrowed incisor pulp. In contrast, osteoclast formation was not significantly different among the groups. These results suggest that a diet with high amounts of both fat and cholesterol induces bone loss.

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