Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) is a chronic liver disorder marked by hepatic fat accumulation and inflammatory infiltrates which may evolve to cirrhosis. Clinical studies have demonstrated the higher risk of MASH development after tamoxifen (TAM) therapy, especially in obese patients. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate MASH induction by TAM combined with high fat diet (HFD) and the potential interference of memantine (MEMA) with MASH progression via modulation of SIRT6 and its related signaling pathways. MASH was induced in female Wistar rats by co-administration of TAM (25 mg/kg/day, p.o.) and HFD for 5 weeks. Liver function biomarkers, tissue triglyceride and cholesterol, MASH scoring, SIRT6 with its related signals, and lipid synthesis/oxidation markers were estimated. By comparison to MASH group, MEMA improved liver function indices (ALT, AST, ALP, albumin) and reduced the progression of MASH, evidenced by decreased accumulation of lipids in hepatic tissue, improved histological features, and reduced MASH scoring. MEMA enhanced hepatic SIRT6 and downregulated p-AKT/mTOR signaling, that subsequently reduced expressions of the lipid synthesis biomarkers (SREBP1c, SCD), while elevating the lipid oxidation markers (PPAR-α, CPT1). Moreover, MEMA enhanced NRF2/HO-1 signaling, with subsequently improved antioxidant defense and pro-inflammatory/anti-inflammatory cytokines balance. Analysis of SIRT6 correlations with p-AKT/mTOR, NRF2/HO-1, SREBP1c, and PPAR-α further confirmed our results. Consequently, we conclude that MEMA could interfere with MASH progression, at least in part, via enhanced SIRT6 expression and modulation of its related p-AKT/mTOR and NRF2/HO-1 signaling pathways, eventually reducing liver steatosis and inflammation. That could be a promising therapeutic modality for curbing MASH progression.
Keywords: Memantine; NRF2/HO-1; SIRT6; SREBP1c/PPAR-α; Tamoxifen/HFD-Induced MASH; p-AKT/mTOR.
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