4.7 Article

Faeces-derived extracellular vesicles participate in the onset of barrier dysfunction leading to liver diseases

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXTRACELLULAR VESICLES
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jev2.12303

Keywords

extracellular vesicles; gut microbiota; intestinal permeability; non-alcoholic fatty liver disease

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The study investigates the role of fEVs and cEVs in liver diseases such as NAFLD and NASH. NASH-fEVs were found to have deleterious effects, increasing intestinal permeability and reducing expression of tight junction proteins through the involvement of nmMLCK and lipopolysaccharide pathways.
The role of extracellular vesicles (EVs) from faeces (fEVs) and small circulating EVs (cEVs) in liver diseases such as non-alcoholic fatty diseases (NAFLD) and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) has not been demonstrated. fEVs and cEVs of healthy donors, NAFLD and NASH patients were isolated and characterized. The effects of EVs were evaluated in intestinal, endothelial, Kupffer and stellate cells. Non-muscular myosin light chain kinase (nmMLCK) deficient mice were used in vivo. Bacterial origins of fEVs were analysed by 16s rDNA gene sequencing. fEVs and small cEVs were composed of prokaryotic and eukaryotic origins. Only NASH-fEVs exerted deleterious effects. NASH-fEVs increased intestinal permeability and reduced expression of tight junction proteins that were prevented by nmMLCK inhibition, increased endothelial cell permeability and inflammatory cytokines and chemokines requiring TLR4/lipopolysaccharide pathway. NASH-fEVs and NASH-cEVs activated profibrotic and proinflammatory proteins of hepatic stellate cells. Treatment with NASH-fEVs evoked an increase in intestinal permeability in wild type but not in nmMLCK deficient mice. Bacterial origins of fEVs were different between NAFLD and NASH patients and 16 amplicon sequence variants were differentially abundant. We demonstrate that fEVs actively participate in barrier dysfunctions leading to liver injuries underscoring the role of nmMLCK and lipopolysaccharide carried by fEVs.

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