Eight-week-old male mice (WT, A1KO, A2BKO, A2AWT, and A2AKO mice) were fed a liquid diet containing ethanol or an equal caloric diet containing maltose for 6 weeks and then sacrificed. The livers and bodies of the mice were weighed on the day of sacrifice and the liver/total body weight ratio was calculated. The serum AST and triglyceride and hepatic tissue triglyceride levels were also measured, as described in Methods. The hepatic steatosis grade was based on the percentage of steatotic hepatocytes in the H&E-stained liver sections. (A) H&E-stained liver sections from maltose- and ethanol-treated A1KO, A2BKO, A2AWT, and A2AKO mice (original magnification, ×400). (B) Oil Red O–stained liver sections from ethanol-treated A1KO and A2BKO mice (original magnification, ×400). (C) Hepatic steatosis grades of ethanol-treated WT, A1KO, A2BKO, A2AWT, and A2AKO mice. Steatosis grades in maltose-treated WT, A1KO, A2BKO, A2AWT, and A2AKO mice were 0. (D) Liver/body weight ratio. (E) Serum AST levels. (F) Serum triglyceride levels. (G) Hepatic tissue triglyceride levels. #P < 0.01, A1KO mice or A2BKO mice versus WT mice, respectively; *P < 0.01, ethanol mice versus control mice in different groups, respectively; **P < 0.01, ethanol KO mice versus control KO mice or control WT mice or ethanol WT mice, respectively; n = 5–10 for each group of mice.