4.7 Article

Differential role of MLKL in alcohol-associated and non-alcohol-associated fatty liver diseases in mice and humans

Journal

JCI INSIGHT
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.140180

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [P50 AA024333, R01AA023722, UO1 AA026938, R21 AA020941, P30 DK097348, R21 AR071046, RO1 GM119174, RO1 DK113196, UO1 AA021890, U01DK061732-15]
  2. Fondo de Investigacion Sanitaria Carlos III - Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER), Union Europea, Una manera de hacer Europa [PI17/00673, CPII16/00041]
  3. China Scholarship Council [201806280215]
  4. JSPS Overseas Research Fellowship [201960331]

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The study found that MLKL plays a different role in ALD and NAFL/NASH mouse models, and suggested that RIP1-RIP3-MLKL can be used as biomarkers to distinguish alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH) from NASH.
Hepatocellular death contributes to progression of alcohol-associated (ALD-associated) and non-alcohol-associated (NAFL/NASH) liver diseases. However, receptor-interaction protein kinase 3 (RIP3), an intermediate in necroptotic cell death, contributes to injury in murine models of ALD but not NAFL/NASH. We show here that a differential role for mixed-lineage kinase domain-like protein (MLKL), the downstream effector of RIP3, in murine models of ALD versus NAFL/NASH and that RIP1-RIP3-MLKL can be used as biomarkers to distinguish alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH) from NASH. Phospho-MLKL was higher in livers of patients with NASH compared with AH or healthy controls (HCs). MLKL expression, phosphorylation, oligomerization, and translocation to plasma membrane were induced in WT mice fed diets high in fat, fructose, and cholesterol but not in response to Gao-binge (acute on chronic) ethanol exposure. Mlkl(-/-) mice were not protected from ethanol-induced hepatocellular injury, which was associated with increased expression of chemokines and neutrophil recruitment. Circulating concentrations of RIP1 and RIP3, but not MLKL, distinguished patients with AH from HCs or patients with NASH. Taken together, these data indicate that MLKL is differentially activated in ALD/AH compared with NAFL/NASH in both murine models and patients. Furthermore, plasma RIP1 and RIP3 may be promising biomarkers for distinguishing AH and NASH.

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