Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
MASLD does not affect fertility and senolytics fail to prevent MASLD progression in male mice
Jéssica D. Hense, Driele N. Garcia, Bianka M. Zanini, Mariana M. Barreto, Giulia C. Perreira, José V. V. Isola, Camila de Brito, Michał Fornalik, Samim Ali Mondal, Bianca M. Ávila, Thaís Larré Oliveira, Heather C. Rice, Charles I. Lacy, RODRIGO A. VAUCHER, Jeffrey B. Mason
Scientific Reports · 2024 · ▲ 6 citations
Abstract
Senescent cells have been linked to the pathogenesis of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). However, the effectiveness of senolytic drugs in reducing liver damage in mice with MASLD is not clear. Additionally, MASLD has been reported to adversely affect male reproductive function. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the protective effect of senolytic drugs on liver damage and fertility in male mice with MASLD. Three-month-old male mice were fed a standard diet (SD) or a choline-deficient western diet (WD) until 9 months of age. At 6 months of age mice were randomized within dietary treatment groups into senolytic (dasatinib + quercetin [D + Q]; fisetin [FIS]) or vehicle control treatment groups. We found that mice fed choline-deficient WD had liver damage characteristic of MASLD, with increased liver size, triglycerides accumulation, fibrosis, along increased liver cellular senescence(definition) and liver and systemic inflammation. Senolytics(definition) were not able to reduce liver damage, senescence and systemic inflammation, suggesting limited efficacy in controlling WD-induced liver damage. Sperm quality and fertility remained unchanged in mice developing MASLD or receiving senolytics. Our data suggest that liver damage and senescence in mice developing MASLD is not reversible by the use of senolytics. Additionally, neither MASLD nor senolytics affected fertility in male mice.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1038/s41598-024-67697-0
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-15 MST
Cite this
APA
Hense, J.D., Garcia, D.N., Zanini, B.M., Barreto, M.M., Perreira, G.C., Isola, J.V.V., Brito, C.D., Fornalik, M., Mondal, S.A., Ávila, B.M., Oliveira, T.L., Rice, H.C., Lacy, C.I., VAUCHER, R.A., Mason, J.B., Masternak, M.M., Stout, M.B., & Schneider, A. (2024). MASLD does not affect fertility and senolytics fail to prevent MASLD progression in male mice. <em>Scientific Reports</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-67697-0
Vancouver
Hense JD, Garcia DN, Zanini BM, Barreto MM, Perreira GC, Isola JVV, et al. MASLD does not affect fertility and senolytics fail to prevent MASLD progression in male mice. Scientific Reports. 2024. doi:10.1038/s41598-024-67697-0.
BibTeX
@article{jssica2024MASLDd,
title = {MASLD does not affect fertility and senolytics fail to prevent MASLD progression in male mice},
author = {Jéssica D. Hense and Driele N. Garcia and Bianka M. Zanini and Mariana M. Barreto and Giulia C. Perreira and José V. V. Isola and Camila de Brito and Michał Fornalik and Samim Ali Mondal and Bianca M. Ávila and Thaís Larré Oliveira and Heather C. Rice and Charles I. Lacy and RODRIGO A. VAUCHER and Jeffrey B. Mason and Michał M. Masternak and Michael B. Stout and Augusto Schneider},
journal = {Scientific Reports},
year = {2024},
doi = {10.1038/s41598-024-67697-0},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.