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Hepatocyte-specific IL11 cis-signaling drives lipotoxicity and underlies the transition from NAFLD to NASH

Authors :
Sebastian Schafer
Stuart A. Cook
Madhulika Tripathi
Jin Zhou
Eleonora Adami
Jessie Tan
Shamini Guna Shekeran
Sonia Chothani
Nicole S. J. Ko
W. Lim
Anissa A. Widjaja
Brijesh K. Singh
Sivakumar Viswanathan
Jinrui Dong
Paul M. Yen
Mao Wang
Sze Yun Lim
Benjamin Ng
Pei Min Lio
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group UK, 2021.

Abstract

IL11 is important for fibrosis in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) but its role beyond the stroma in liver disease is unclear. Here, we investigate the role of IL11 in hepatocyte lipotoxicity. Hepatocytes highly express IL11RA and secrete IL11 in response to lipid loading. Autocrine IL11 activity causes hepatocyte death through NOX4-derived ROS, activation of ERK, JNK and caspase-3, impaired mitochondrial function and reduced fatty acid oxidation. Paracrine IL11 activity stimulates hepatic stellate cells and causes fibrosis. In mouse models of NASH, hepatocyte-specific deletion of Il11ra1 protects against liver steatosis, fibrosis and inflammation while reducing serum glucose, cholesterol and triglyceride levels and limiting obesity. In mice deleted for Il11ra1, restoration of IL11 cis-signaling in hepatocytes reconstitutes steatosis and inflammation but not fibrosis. We found no evidence for the existence of IL6 or IL11 trans-signaling in hepatocytes or NASH. These data show that IL11 modulates hepatocyte metabolism and suggests a mechanism for NAFLD to NASH transition.<br />IL11 contributes to the development of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) through incompletely understood mechanisms. Here, the authors report that lipotoxicity-driven autocrine IL11 activity underlies hepatocyte metabolic dysfunction and death via a NOX4/ERK-mediated mechanism while paracrine IL11 activity stimulates hepatic stellate cells contributing to fibrosis and inflammation in the context of NASH.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97a0d29b807401e77266f7704149868f