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Amplifying hepatic L-aspartate levels suppresses CCl4-induced liver fibrosis by reversing glucocorticoid receptor β-mediated mitochondrial malfunction

Authors :
Rui Su
Hui-Ling Fu
Qian-Xue Zhang
Chen-Yan Wu
Guan-Yu Yang
Jun-Jie Wu
Wen-Jie Cao
Jin Liu
Zhong-Ping Jiang
Cong-Jun Xu
Yong Rao
Ling Huang
Source :
Pharmacological Research, Vol 206, Iss , Pp 107294- (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2024.

Abstract

Liver fibrosis is a determinant-stage process of many chronic liver diseases and affected over 7.9 billion populations worldwide with increasing demands of ideal therapeutic agents. Discovery of active molecules with anti-hepatic fibrosis efficacies presents the most attacking filed. Here, we revealed that hepatic L-aspartate levels were decreased in CCl4-induced fibrotic mice. Instead, supplementation of L-aspartate orally alleviated typical manifestations of liver injury and fibrosis. These therapeutic efficacies were alongside improvements of mitochondrial adaptive oxidation. Notably, treatment with L-aspartate rebalanced hepatic cholesterol-steroid metabolism and reduced the levels of liver-impairing metabolites, including corticosterone (CORT). Mechanistically, L-aspartate treatment efficiently reversed CORT-mediated glucocorticoid receptor β (GRβ) signaling activation and subsequent transcriptional suppression of the mitochondrial genome by directly binding to the mitochondrial genome. Knockout of GRβ ameliorated corticosterone-mediated mitochondrial dysfunction and hepatocyte damage which also weakened the improvements of L-aspartate in suppressing GRβ signaling. These data suggest that L-aspartate ameliorates hepatic fibrosis by suppressing GRβ signaling via rebalancing cholesterol-steroid metabolism, would be an ideal candidate for clinical liver fibrosis treatment.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10961186
Volume :
206
Issue :
107294-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Pharmacological Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.04a491c7e404d369aae2bb34d401f18
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phrs.2024.107294