1. Combined Insults of a MASH Diet and Alcohol Binges Activate Intercellular Communication and Neutrophil Recruitment via the NLRP3-IL-1β Axis in the Liver.
- Author
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Babuta M, Nagesh PT, Datta AA, Remotti V, Zhuang Y, Mehta J, Lami F, Wang Y, and Szabo G
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Inflammasomes metabolism, Binge Drinking pathology, Binge Drinking complications, Hepatocytes metabolism, Hepatocytes drug effects, Hepatocytes pathology, Cell Communication drug effects, Sulfones pharmacology, Sulfonamides pharmacology, Macrophages metabolism, Macrophages drug effects, Furans pharmacology, Humans, Indenes pharmacology, Diet, Signal Transduction drug effects, Extracellular Traps metabolism, Extracellular Traps drug effects, Fatty Liver pathology, Fatty Liver metabolism, Sulfoxides pharmacology, NLR Family, Pyrin Domain-Containing 3 Protein metabolism, Liver pathology, Liver metabolism, Liver drug effects, Interleukin-1beta metabolism, Neutrophil Infiltration drug effects, Neutrophils metabolism, Neutrophils drug effects
- Abstract
Binge drinking in obese patients positively correlates with accelerated liver damage and liver-related death. However, the underlying mechanism and the effect of alcohol use on the progression of metabolic-dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) remain unexplored. Here, we show that short-term feeding of a metabolic-dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) diet plus daily acute alcohol binges for three days induce liver injury and activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome. We identify that a MASH diet plus acute alcohol binges promote liver inflammation via increased infiltration of monocyte-derived macrophages, neutrophil recruitment, and NET release in the liver. Our results suggest that both monocyte-derived macrophages and neutrophils are activated via NLRP3, while the administration of MCC950, an NLRP3 inhibitor, dampens these effects.In this study, we reveal important intercellular communication between hepatocytes and neutrophils. We discover that the MASH diet plus alcohol induces IL-1β via NLRP3 activation and that IL-1β acts on hepatocytes and promotes the production of CXCL1 and LCN2. In turn, the increase in these neutrophils recruits chemokines and causes further infiltration and activation of neutrophils in the liver. In vivo administration of the NLRP3 inhibitor, MCC950, improves the early phase of MetALD by preventing liver damage, steatosis, inflammation, and immune cells recruitment.
- Published
- 2024
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