Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Jan 2023)

Hawthorn total flavonoids ameliorate ambient fine particulate matter-induced insulin resistance and metabolic abnormalities of lipids in mice

  • Weijia Gu,
  • Ruiqing Wang,
  • Ziwei Cai,
  • Xiujuan Lin,
  • Lu Zhang,
  • Rucheng Chen,
  • Ran Li,
  • Wenhui Zhang,
  • Xuming Ji,
  • Guanghou Shui,
  • Qinghua Sun,
  • Cuiqing Liu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 249
p. 114456

Abstract

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Recent studies have shown a strong correlation between ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) exposure and diabetes risk, including abnormal lipid accumulation and systemic insulin resistance (IR). Hawthorn total flavonoids (HF) are the main groups of active substances in Hawthorn, which showed anti-hyperlipidemic and anti-hyperglycemic effects. Therefore, we hypothesized that HF may attenuate PM2.5-induced IR and abnormal lipid accumulation. Female C57BL/6 N mice were randomly assigned to the filtered air exposure (FA) group, concentrated PM2.5 exposure (PM) group, PM2.5 exposure maintained on a low-dose HF diet (LHF) group, and PM2.5 exposure maintained on a high-dose HF diet (HHF) group for an 8-week PM2.5 exposure using a whole-body exposure device. Body glucose homeostasis, lipid profiles in the liver and serum, and enzymes responsible for hepatic lipid metabolism were measured. We found that exposure to PM2.5 impaired glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity. In addition, triacylglycerol (TAG) in serum elevated, whereas hepatic TAG levels were decreased after PM2.5 exposure, accompanied by inhibited fatty acid uptake, lipogenesis, and lipolysis in the liver. HF administration, on the other hand, balanced the hepatic TAG levels by increasing fatty acid uptake and decreasing lipid export, leading to alleviated systemic IR and hyperlipidemia in PM2.5-exposed mice. Therefore, HF administration may be an effective strategy to protect against PM2.5-induced IR and metabolic abnormalities of lipids.

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