International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Dec 2018)

Differential Metabolic Responses to Adipose Atrophy Associated with Cancer Cachexia and Caloric Restriction in Rats and the Effect of Rikkunshito in Cancer Cachexia

  • Yuka Sudo,
  • Hiroki Otsuka,
  • Ryota Miyakawa,
  • Akifumi Goto,
  • Yohei Kashiwase,
  • Kiyoshi Terawaki,
  • Kanako Miyano,
  • Yuto Hirao,
  • Kanari Taki,
  • Ryoma Tagawa,
  • Masaki Kobayashi,
  • Naoyuki Okita,
  • Yasuhito Uezono,
  • Yoshikazu Higami

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms19123852
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 12
p. 3852

Abstract

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Despite the similar phenotypes, including weight loss, reduction of food intake, and lower adiposity, associated with caloric restriction (CR) and cancer cachexia (CC), CC is a progressive wasting syndrome, while mild CR improves whole body metabolism. In the present study, we compared adipose metabolic changes in a novel rat model of CC, mild CR (70% of the food intake of control rats, which is similar to the food consumption of CC rats), and severe CR (30% of the food intake of controls). We show that CC and severe CR are associated with much smaller adipocytes with significantly lower mitochondrial DNA content; but, that mild CR is not. CC and both mild and severe CR similarly upregulated proteins involved in lipolysis. CC also downregulated proteins involved in fatty acid biosynthesis, but mild CR upregulated these. These findings suggest that CC might impair de novo fatty acid biosynthesis and reduce mitochondrial biogenesis, similar to severe CR. We also found that rikkunshito, a traditional Japanese herbal medicine, does not ameliorate the enhanced lipolysis and mitochondrial impairment, but rather, rescues de novo fatty acid biosynthesis, suggesting that rikkunshito administration might have partially similar effects to mild CR.

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