Local fat content determines global and local stiffness in livers with simple steatosis

Author:

Li David12ORCID,Janmey Paul A.2345,Wells Rebecca G.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Department of Medicine University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

2. NSF Science and Technology Center for Engineering MechanoBiology University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

3. Department of Bioengineering University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

4. Institute for Medicine and Engineering University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

5. Department of Physiology University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractFat accumulation during liver steatosis precedes inflammation and fibrosis in fatty liver diseases, and is associated with disease progression. Despite a large body of evidence that liver mechanics play a major role in liver disease progression, the effect of fat accumulation by itself on liver mechanics remains unclear. Thus, we conducted ex vivo studies of liver mechanics in rodent models of simple steatosis to isolate and examine the mechanical effects of intrahepatic fat accumulation, and found that fat accumulation softens the liver. Using a novel adaptation of microindentation to permit association of local mechanics with microarchitectural features, we found evidence that the softening of fatty liver results from local softening of fatty regions rather than uniform softening of the liver. These results suggest that fat accumulation itself exerts a softening effect on liver tissue. This, along with the localized heterogeneity of softening within the liver, has implications in what mechanical mechanisms are involved in the progression of liver steatosis to more severe pathologies and disease. Finally, the ability to examine and associate local mechanics with microarchitectural features is potentially applicable to the study of the role of heterogeneous mechanical microenvironments in both other liver pathologies and other organ systems.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),Molecular Medicine,Physiology

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