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Remote regulation of hepatic lipid secretion in the intestine by metabolic interaction of dietary arginine with ornithine.
PubMed
Authors: Nishi H, Nakanishi S, Xie L, Fujinaga M, Zhang Y, Yamanaka D, Fujita S, Saruwatari J, Oniki K, Zhang MR, Hakuno F
Year
2026
Paper ID
56448
Status
Peer-reviewed
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
191
Citations
N/A
Abstract
The quantity and quality of dietary protein profoundly influence satiety, body growth, and systemic metabolism. Among the 20 major proteinogenic amino acids, arginine (Arg) is considerably associated with hepatic steatosis; when animals fed an Arg-deficient diet (ΔArg), triacylglyceride (TAG) dramatically accumulates in the liver. To explore the underlying mechanism, we first investigated the role of ornithine (Orn), as Orn is the primary metabolite of Arg and it is reportedly involved in the regulation of liver metabolism. While male Wistar rats fed a ΔArg diet exhibited a significant increase in liver TAG levels due to an attenuated TAG secretion, and consistently marked reduction of TAG-rich lipoproteins in the circulation, Orn addition to the diet completely abolished all these metabolic changes. Orn was only effective when taken orally, but not through intraperitoneal administration, suggesting that the intestine plays an essential role for Orn to regulate liver metabolism. The metabolic features similar to those of our rat model was also observed in the analyses of clinical samples, implying the common mechanism in humans. Conclusively, dietary Arg deficiency lowers local Arg-to-Orn conversion in the intestine, which in turn inhibits hepatic lipid secretion remotely via gut-liver axis.
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- This paper contributes to the Quantum Chemistry research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- The quantity and quality of dietary protein profoundly influence satiety, body growth, and systemic metabolism.
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