4.3 Article

Altered vitamin A metabolism in human liver slices corresponds to fibrogenesis

Journal

CTS-CLINICAL AND TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages 976-989

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cts.12962

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [5R01GM111772-06, 5T32DK007247-42]

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Research shows that acute liver injury leads to complex changes in vitamin A metabolic flux in the liver, including an increase in tissue concentrations of atRA, decreased retinyl ester and atRA formation rates, and time-dependent changes in the expression of metabolizing enzymes. These early changes precede HSC activation and upregulation of profibrogenic gene expression, indicating that HSC and Kupffer cells are key cells involved in alterations to vitamin A metabolic flux and signaling after liver injury.
All-trans-retinoic acid (atRA), the active metabolite of vitamin A, has antifibrogenic properties in vitro and in animal models. Liver vitamin A homeostasis is maintained by cell-specific enzymatic activities including storage in hepatic stellate cells (HSCs), secretion into circulation from hepatocytes, and formation and clearance of atRA. During chronic liver injury, HSC activation is associated with a decrease in liver retinyl esters and retinol concentrations. atRA is synthesized through two enzymatic steps from retinol, but it is unknown if the loss of retinoid stores is associated with changes in atRA formation and which cell types contribute to the metabolic changes. The aim of this study was to determine if the vitamin A metabolic flux is perturbed in acute liver injury, and if changes in atRA concentrations are associated with HSC activation and collagen expression. At basal levels, HSC and Kupffer cells expressed key genes involved in vitamin A metabolism, whereas after acute liver injury, complex changes to the metabolic flux were observed in liver slices. These changes include a reproducible spike in atRA tissue concentrations, decreased retinyl ester and atRA formation rate, and time-dependent changes to the expression of metabolizing enzymes. Kinetic simulations suggested that oxidoreductases are important in determining retinoid metabolic flux after liver injury. These early changes precede HSC activation and upregulation of profibrogenic gene expression, which were inversely correlated with atRA tissue concentrations, suggesting that HSC and Kupffer cells are key cells involved in changes to vitamin A metabolic flux and signaling after liver injury.

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