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Phosphatidylcholine ameliorates lipid accumulation and liver injury in high-fat diet mice by modulating bile acid metabolism and gut microbiota

Longgang Jia, Ruijia Wang, Zhiqi Huang, Nana Sun, Hui‐Chuan Sun, Hongbin Wang, Fuping Lu, Yihan Liu

2024International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Phosphatidylcholine (PC) has garnered considerable attention due to its involvement in a wide array of crucial biological functions. However, there is still much to active explore regarding the precise mechanisms that underlie PC’s actions in the context of high-fat diet. In this study, we found that both PC intervention and treatment significantly mitigated lipid accumulation, liver damage, and body weight gaining triggered by the high-fat diet. Untargeted and targeted metabolomic analyses uncovered substantial effects of PC on bile acid metabolism, especially led to a substantial reduction in elevated levels of free bile acids. 16S rRNA gene sequencing revealed that PC modulated the gut microbiota structures and compositions in high-fat diet mice, particularly exhibiting a positive association with Pseudoflavonifractor abundance, and a negative correlation with Olsenella, Parasutterella, and Allobaculum abundance. Our study suggested that PC held promise as a potential candidate for alleviating lipid metabolism injury, liver disease or obesity.

Topics & Concepts

Gut floraLipid metabolismBile acidContext (archaeology)MetabolismBiologyPhosphatidylcholineLiver injuryBiochemistryFatty liverEndocrinologyInternal medicinePhospholipidMedicineDiseasePaleontologyMembraneGut microbiota and healthMetabolomics and Mass Spectrometry StudiesLiver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment
Phosphatidylcholine ameliorates lipid accumulation and liver injury in high-fat diet mice by modulating bile acid metabolism and gut microbiota | Litcius