One study noted that a saponin in Gynostemma Pentaphyllum is able to selectively activate LXRα, an enzyme highly localized to the liver that plays a role in cholesterol regulation.[75]
A study incubating hepatocytes with a high glucose and linoleic acid content (to mimic the conditions which damage liver cells during NAFLD[76][77]) found that an ethanolic extract of Gynostemma pentaphyllum was able to attenuate the concentration of triglycerides and cholesterol in hepatocytes in a concentration dependent manner between 100-300mcg/mL.[78] A reduction of F2-IsoPs was noted (although unreliable) and thought to be related to anti-oxidant properties; an increase of nitrate concentration was noted when coincubated with fatty acids only.[78]
Hepatic Stellate cell growth has been shown to be inhibited in vitro at 500μg/mL by Gypenosides via inhibiting the Akt/p70s6k pathway[79] and suppressing the secretions of the cytokines MCP-1 (40%), VEGF (17%), and TIMP-1 (25%) relative to untreated control;[80] this inhibition of MCP-1 also occurs with suppressed mRNA content, which is independent of the Akt/p70s6k pathway.[80] A reduction in type I procollagen also occured in a dose-dependent manner, although on all markers concentrations of 100-400mcg/mL were much less effective than 500mcg/mL.[80] These mechanisms may underlie the anti-fibrotic effect observed in vivo, when rats given Gynostemma Pentaphyllum experienced less collagen growth in their livers in response to a fibrosis-inducing toxin (CCl4).[81]
General protective effects from mixed anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory mechanisms, may be anti-fibrotic and protect liver cells during instances of NAFLD
In rats given a high fat and cholesterol diet with some alcohol (to induce hepatic steatotosis) Gypenosides given at 15, 30, or 60mg/kg noted that the high dose group was approximately as effective as Silymarin at 23mg/kg in attenuating weight gain over 10 weeks and attenuating the hepatic index, but was more effective at reducing intrahepatic triglycerides (although PPARα mRNA levels were similar between groups; both higher than control).[82] ALT and AST were reduced similarly in the 30-60mg/kg Gypenoside groups as was the Silymarin group.[82]
One pilot study that compared 80mL _Gynostemma Pentaphyllum_tea against placebo in persons with Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver (NAFLD) in conjunction with dieting noted that while diet was effective at all time points, the addition of tea failed to exert any significant benefit at 2 months but at 6 months was associated with significantly improved insulin sensitivity, weight loss, and serum liver enzyme profile relative to dieting placebo.[83]
In instances of high liver fat (NAFLD), Gynostemma Pentaphyllum has shown benefit following oral administration; only one human study using low dose tea but showed benefit over 6 months