4.8 Article

Decreased Hepatocyte Autophagy Leads to Synergistic IL-1β and TNF Mouse Liver Injury and Inflammation

Journal

HEPATOLOGY
Volume 72, Issue 2, Pages 595-608

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1002/hep.31209

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01DK044234, R01AA022601, T32DK108735, G12MD007602]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background and Aims The proinflammatory cytokine IL-1 beta has been implicated in the pathophysiology of nonalcoholic and alcoholic steatohepatitis. How IL-1 beta promotes liver injury in these diseases is unclear, as no IL-1 beta receptor-linked death pathway has been identified. Autophagy functions in hepatocyte resistance to injury and death, and findings of decreased hepatic autophagy in many liver diseases suggest a role for impaired autophagy in disease pathogenesis. Recent findings that autophagy blocks mouse liver injury from lipopolysaccharide led to an examination of autophagy's function in hepatotoxicity from proinflammatory cytokines. Approach and Results AML12 cells with decreased autophagy from a lentiviralautophagy-related 5(Atg5) knockdown were resistant to toxicity from TNF, but sensitized to death from IL-1 beta, which was markedly amplified by TNF co-treatment. IL-1 beta/TNF death was necrosis by trypan blue and propidium iodide positivity, absence of mitochondrial death pathway and caspase activation, and failure of a caspase inhibitor or necrostatin-1s to prevent death. IL-1 beta/TNF depleted autophagy-deficient cells of ATP, and ATP depletion and cell death were prevented by supplementation with the energy substrate pyruvate or oleate. Pharmacological inhibitors and genetic knockdown studies demonstrated that IL-1 beta/TNF-induced necrosis resulted from lysosomal permeabilization and release of cathepsins B and L in autophagy-deficient cells. Mice with a tamoxifen-inducible, hepatocyte-specificAtg5knockout were similarly sensitized to cathepsin-dependent hepatocellular injury and death from IL-1 beta/TNF in combination, but neither IL-1 beta nor TNF alone. Knockout mice had increased hepatic inflammation, and IL-1 beta/TNF-treated, autophagy-deficient AML12 cells secreted exosomes with proinflammatory damage-associated molecular patterns. Conclusions The findings delineate mechanisms by which decreased hepatocyte autophagy promotes IL-1 beta/TNF-induced necrosis from impaired energy homeostasis and lysosomal permeabilization and inflammation through the secretion of exosomal damage-associated molecular patterns.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available