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Prolonged hypernutrition impairs TREM2-dependent efferocytosis to license chronic liver inflammation and NASH development

Authors :
Xiaochen Wang
Qifeng He
Chuanli Zhou
Yueyuan Xu
Danhui Liu
Naoto Fujiwara
Naoto Kubota
Arielle Click
Polly Henderson
Janiece Vancil
Cesia Ammi Marquez
Ganesh Gunasekaran
Myron E. Schwartz
Parissa Tabrizian
Umut Sarpel
Maria Isabel Fiel
Yarui Diao
Beicheng Sun
Yujin Hoshida
Shuang Liang
Zhenyu Zhong
Source :
Immunity.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Obesity-induced chronic liver inflammation is a hallmark of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)-an aggressive form of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. However, it remains unclear how such a low-grade, yet persistent, inflammation is sustained in the liver. Here, we show that the macrophage phagocytic receptor TREM2, induced by hepatocyte-derived sphingosine-1-phosphate, was required for efferocytosis of lipid-laden apoptotic hepatocytes and thereby maintained liver immune homeostasis. However, prolonged hypernutrition led to the production of proinflammatory cytokines TNF and IL-1β in the liver to induce TREM2 shedding through ADAM17-dependent proteolytic cleavage. Loss of TREM2 resulted in aberrant accumulation of dying hepatocytes, thereby further augmenting proinflammatory cytokine production. This ultimately precipitated a vicious cycle that licensed chronic inflammation to drive simple steatosis transition to NASH. Therefore, impaired macrophage efferocytosis is a previously unrecognized key pathogenic event that enables chronic liver inflammation in obesity. Blocking TREM2 cleavage to restore efferocytosis may represent an effective strategy to treat NASH.

Details

ISSN :
10974180
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Immunity
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....93089517f650931a6fd41c8876c0c394