The Effect of Diet-induced Obesity on Toxicological Parameters in the Polygenic Sprague-Dawley Rat Model

Author:

Rojas Jennifer M.1,Bolze Florian2,Thorup Inger3,Nowak Jette3,Dalsgaard Charlotte M.3,Skydsgaard Mikala3,Berthelsen Line O.3,Keane Kevin A.3,Søeborg Henrik3,Sjögren Ingrid3,Jensen Jes T.4,Fels Johannes J.5,Offenberg Hanne K.3,Andersen Lærke W.2,Dalgaard Majken1

Affiliation:

1. Early Regulatory Toxicology, Novo Nordisk A/S, Måløv, Denmark

2. Toxicology Development Projects, Novo Nordisk A/S, Måløv, Denmark

3. Toxicopathology, Novo Nordisk A/S, Måløv, Denmark

4. CiToxLAB Scantox A/S, Lille Skensved, Denmark

5. Research Bioanalysis, Novo Nordisk A/S, Måløv, Denmark

Abstract

The obese rodent serves as an indispensable tool for proof-of-concept efficacy and mode-of-action pharmacology studies. Yet the utility of this disease model as an adjunct to the conventional healthy animal in the nonclinical safety evaluation of anti-obesity pharmacotherapies has not been elucidated. Regulatory authorities have recommended employing disease models in toxicology studies when necessary. Our study investigated standard and exploratory toxicology parameters in the high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obese, polygenic Sprague-Dawley rat model in comparison to chow diet (CD)-fed controls. We sought to establish feasibility of the model for safety testing and relevance to human obesity pathophysiology. We report that both sexes fed a 45% kcal HFD for 29 weeks developed obesity and metabolic derangements that mimics to a certain extent, common human obesity. Minor clinical pathologies were observed in both sexes and considered related to CD versus HFD differences. Histopathologically, both sexes exhibited mild obesity-associated findings in brown and subcutaneous white fat, bone, kidneys, liver, lung, pancreas, salivary parotid glands, and skeletal muscle. We conclude that chronic HFD feeding in both sexes led to the development of an obese but otherwise healthy rat. Therefore, the diet-induced obese Sprague-Dawley rat may serve as a suitable model for evaluating toxicity findings encountered with anti-obesity compounds.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cell Biology,Toxicology,Molecular Biology,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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