Research Article Details

Article ID: A13031
PMID: 30172659
Source: Clin Nutr
Title: Marine omega-3 fatty acid supplementation in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: Plasma proteomics in the randomized WELCOME* trial.
Abstract: BACKGROUND & AIMS: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a liver condition characterised by liver fat accumulation and often considered to be the liver manifestation of metabolic syndrome. The aim of&#160;this study was to examine in patients with NAFLD the system-wide effects of treatment with docosahexaenoic acid&#160;+&#160;eicosapentaenoic acid (DHA&#160;+&#160;EPA) versus placebo on the plasma proteome. METHODS: Plasma from patients that participated in a 15-18 months randomised, double-blind placebo-controlled trial testing the effects of 4&#160;g DHA&#160;+&#160;EPA daily was analysed using depletion-free quantitative proteomics. RESULTS: Bioinformatics interpretation of the proteomic analysis showed that DHA&#160;+&#160;EPA treatment affected pathways involving blood coagulation, immune/inflammatory response and cholesterol metabolism (p&#160;<&#160;0.05). Two key proteins of cardiovascular risk, prothrombin and apolipoprotein B-100, were shown to decrease as a result of DHA&#160;+&#160;EPA supplementation [Prothrombin: Males DHA&#160;+&#160;EPA Mean iTRAQ log2ratio (SD)&#160;=&#160;-0.13 (0.20) p&#160;=&#160;0.05, Females DHA&#160;+&#160;EPA Mean iTRAQ log2ratio (SD)&#160;=&#160;-0.48 (0.35) p&#160;=&#160;0.03; Apo B-100: Males DHA&#160;+&#160;EPA Mean iTRAQ log2ratio (SD)&#160;=&#160;-0.24 (0.16) p&#160;=&#160;0.01, Females DHA&#160;+&#160;EPA Mean iTRAQ log2ratio (SD)&#160;=&#160;-0.15 (0.05) p&#160;=&#160;0.02]. CONCLUSIONS: Plasma proteomics applied in a randomised, placebo-controlled trial showed that high dose DHA&#160;+&#160;EPA treatment in patients with NAFLD affects multiple pathways involved in chronic non-communicable diseases.
DOI: 10.1016/j.clnu.2018.07.037