4.8 Article

Metabolic adaptation of skeletal muscle to hyperammonemia drives the beneficial effects of L-leucine in cirrhosis

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY
Volume 65, Issue 5, Pages 929-937

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhep.2016.06.004

Keywords

Amino acid transporter; Solute linked carrier; General control non-derepressible; Eukaryotic initiation factor; mTOR1; Sarcopenia

Funding

  1. NIH [DK53307, DK60596]
  2. [DK83414]
  3. [R21 AA 022742]

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Background & Aims: Increased skeletal muscle ammonia uptake with loss of muscle mass adversely affects clinical outcomes in cirrhosis. Hyperammonemia causes reduced protein synthesis and sarcopenia but the cellular responses to impaired proteostasis and molecular mechanism of L-leucine induced adaptation to ammonia induced stress were determined. Methods: Response to activation of amino acid deficiency sensor, GCN2, in the skeletal muscle from cirrhotic patients and the portacaval anastomosis (PCA) rat were quantified. During hyperammonemia and L-leucine supplementation, protein synthesis, phosphorylation of eIF2 alpha, mTORC1 signaling, L-leucine transport and response to L-leucine supplementation were quantified. Adaptation to cellular stress via ATF4 and its target GADD34 were also determined. Results: Activation of the eIF2 alpha kinase GCN2 and impaired mTORC1 signaling were observed in skeletal muscle from cirrhotic patients and PCA rats. Ammonia activated GCN2 mediated elF2 alpha phosphorylation (elF2 alpha-P) and impaired mTORC1 signaling that inhibit protein synthesis in myotubes and MEFs. Adaptation to ammonia induced stress did not involve translational reprogramming by activation transcription factor 4 (ATF4) dependent induction of the eIF2 alpha-P phosphatase subunit GADD34. Instead, ammonia increased expression of the leucineiglutamine exchanger SLC7A5, L-leucine uptake and intracellular L-leucine levels, the latter not being sufficient to rescue the inhibition of protein synthesis, due to potentially enhanced mitochondrial sequestration of L-leucine. L-leucine supplementation rescued protein synthesis inhibition caused by hyperammonemia. Conclusions: Response to hyperammonemia is reminiscent of the cellular response to amino acid starvation, but lacks the adaptive ATF4 dependent integrated stress response (ISR). Instead, hyperammonemia-induced L-leucine uptake was an adaptive response to the GCN2-mediated decreased protein synthesis. Lay summary: Sarcopenia or skeletal muscle loss is the most frequent complication in cirrhosis but there are no treatments because the cause(s) of muscle loss in liver disease are not known. Results from laboratory experiments in animals and muscle cells were validated in human patients with cirrhosis to show that ammonia plays a key role in causing muscle loss in patients with cirrhosis. We identified a novel stress response to ammonia in the muscle that decreases muscle protein content that can be reversed by supplementation with the amino acid L-leucine. (C) 2016 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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