| Literature DB >> 28725183 |
Matthew McMillin1,2, Gabriel Frampton1,2, Stephanie Grant1,2, Shamyal Khan3, Juan Diocares3, Anca Petrescu1,2, Amy Wyatt1,2, Jessica Kain1,2, Brandi Jefferson1,2, Sharon DeMorrow1,2.
Abstract
Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a neuropsychiatric complication that occurs due to deteriorating hepatic function and this syndrome influences patient quality of life, clinical management strategies and survival. During acute liver failure, circulating bile acids increase due to a disruption of the enterohepatic circulation. We previously identified that bile acid-mediated signaling occurs in the brain during HE and contributes to cognitive impairment. However, the influences of bile acids and their downstream signaling pathways on HE-induced neuroinflammation have not been assessed. Conjugated bile acids, such as taurocholic acid (TCA), can activate sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 2 (S1PR2), which has been shown to promote immune cell infiltration and inflammation in other models. The current study aimed to assess the role of bile-acid mediated S1PR2 signaling in neuroinflammation and disease progression during azoxymethane (AOM)-induced HE in mice. Our findings demonstrate a temporal increase of bile acids in the cortex during AOM-induced HE and identified that cortical bile acids were elevated as an early event in this model. In order to classify the specific bile acids that were elevated during HE, a metabolic screen was performed and this assay identified that TCA was increased in the serum and cortex during AOM-induced HE. To reduce bile acid concentrations in the brain, mice were fed a diet supplemented with cholestyramine, which alleviated neuroinflammation by reducing proinflammatory cytokine expression in the cortex compared to the control diet-fed AOM-treated mice. S1PR2 was expressed primarily in neurons and TCA treatment increased chemokine ligand 2 mRNA expression in these cells. The infusion of JTE-013, a S1PR2 antagonist, into the lateral ventricle prior to AOM injection protected against neurological decline and reduced neuroinflammation compared to DMSO-infused AOM-treated mice. Together, this identifies that reducing bile acid levels or S1PR2 signaling are potential therapeutic strategies for the management of HE.Entities:
Keywords: CCL2; S1PR2; acute liver failure; cytokines; microglia; neurons
Year: 2017 PMID: 28725183 PMCID: PMC5496949 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2017.00191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1Bile acids are elevated in the cortex during azoxymethane (AOM)-induced hepatic encephalopathy (HE). (A) Concentrations of total bile acids in cortex homogenates during the indicated stages of neurological decline in AOM-treated mice that are normalized to protein concentrations. (B) Relative concentrations of taurocholic acid (TCA) in serum from vehicle and AOM-treated mice at the pre-neurological and minor neurological stages of AOM-induced HE. (C) Relative concentrations of TCA in cortex homogenates normalized by weight in vehicle and AOM-treated mice at the pre-neurological and minor neurological stages of AOM-induced HE. *p < 0.05 compared to vehicle-treated mice. n = 3 for total bile acid analyses and n = 5 for the metabolic screen for TCA.
Figure 2Systemic inflammation may be modulated by cholestyramine supplementation. (A) Serum consequence of chemokine ligand 2 (CCL2) concentrations measured by ELISA assay in control diet or cholestyramine diet-fed mice administered vehicle or AOM. (B) Interleukin-6 (IL-6) concentration in the serum of control diet or cholestyramine diet-fed mice injected with vehicle or AOM. (C) Serum tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) concentrations measured by ELISA assay in control diet or cholestyramine diet-fed mice administered vehicle or AOM. *p < 0.05 compared to control diet vehicle-treated mice, #p < 0.05 compared to control diet AOM-treated mice. n = 3 or greater for all analyses.
Figure 3Neuroinflammation can be reduced by cholestyramine supplementation. (A) Representative staining for IBA1 (red) in the cortex from control diet and cholestyramine diet-fed mice administered saline (vehicle) or AOM. 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI; blue) was used to stain nuclei. The scale bar on the figure represents 50 μm. (B) Quantification of relative IBA1 field staining in the cortex from control diet and cholestyramine diet-fed mice administered vehicle or AOM. (C) Relative CCL2 mRNA expression in the cortex of control diet and cholestyramine diet-fed mice administered vehicle or AOM. (D) CCL2 concentrations in cortex homogenates normalized to total protein concentrations from control diet and cholestyramine diet-fed mice administered vehicle or AOM. (E) Relative IL-6 mRNA expression in the cortex of control diet and cholestyramine diet-fed mice administered vehicle or AOM. (F) IL-6 concentrations in cortex homogenates normalized to total protein concentrations from control diet and cholestyramine diet-fed mice administered vehicle or AOM. (G) Relative TNFα mRNA expression in the cortex of control diet and cholestyramine diet-fed mice administered vehicle or AOM. (H) TNFα concentrations in cortex homogenates normalized to total protein concentrations from control diet and cholestyramine diet-fed mice administered vehicle or AOM. (I) Relative cortex sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 2 (S1PR2) mRNA expression in control diet and cholestyramine diet-fed mice administered vehicle or AOM. *p < 0.05 compared to control diet vehicle-treated mice, #p < 0.05 compared to control diet AOM-treated mice. n = 3 or greater for all analyses.
Figure 4S1PR2 mediates CCL2 expression in primary neurons. (A) Relative S1PR2 mRNA expression in neurons, astrocytes and microglia isolated from vehicle and AOM-treated mice. (B) Relative CCL2 mRNA expression in primary neurons isolated from C57Bl/6 mice that were treated with 10 μM TCA and/or 50 μM JTE-013. (C) Relative CCL2 mRNA expression in primary neurons isolated from S1PR2−/− mice that were treated with 10 μM TCA. *p < 0.05 compared to basal, #p < 0.05 compared to 10 μM TCA-treated primary neurons. n = 4 for isolated cell S1PR2 analyses and n = 3 for primary neuron S1PR2 mRNA analyses.
Figure 5JTE-013 infusion reduces neurological decline without influencing hepatic injury in AOM-treated mice. (A) Time taken to progress to coma in hours of AOM-treated mice infused with DMSO or JTE-013. (B) Neurological score analyses as assessed by reflex scores and ataxia at the indicated hours post AOM injection in AOM-treated mice infused with DMSO or JTE-013. (C) Representative H&E images from the livers of vehicle or AOM-treated mice infused with DMSO or JTE-013. (D) Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) activity in the serum of vehicle or AOM-treated mice infused with DMSO or JTE-013. *p < 0.05 compared to AOM + DMSO (for time to coma analyses) or vehicle-treated mice infused with DMSO (for serum ALT activity analyses). n = 6 for time to coma and neurological score analyses and n = 4 for serum ALT analyses.
Figure 6Neuroinflammation can be reduced by JTE-013 infusion. (A) Representative staining for IBA1 (red) in the cortex from DMSO or JTE-013 infused mice administered saline (vehicle) or AOM. DAPI (blue) was used to stain nuclei. The scale bar on the figure represents 50 μm. (B) Quantification of relative IBA1 field staining in the cortex from DMSO or JTE-013-infused mice administered vehicle or AOM. (C) Relative CCL2 mRNA expression in the cortex from DMSO or JTE-013-infused mice administered vehicle or AOM. (D) CCL2 concentrations in cortex homogenates normalized to total protein concentrations from DMSO or JTE-013-infused mice administered vehicle or AOM. (E) Relative cortex IL-6 mRNA expression in DMSO or JTE-013-infused mice administered vehicle or AOM. (F) Cortex IL-6 concentrations in homogenates normalized to total protein concentrations from DMSO or JTE-013-infused mice administered vehicle or AOM. (G) Relative TNFα mRNA expression in the cortex from DMSO or JTE-013-infused mice administered vehicle or AOM. (H) TNFα concentrations in cortex homogenates normalized to total protein concentrations from DMSO or JTE-013-infused mice administered vehicle or AOM. *p < 0.05 compared to DMSO-infused vehicle-treated mice, #p < 0.05 compared to DMSO-infused AOM-treated mice. n = 3 or greater for all analyses.
Figure 7Working model of S1PR2-mediated neuroinflammation during AOM-induced HE. AOM-induced liver failure disrupts the enterohepatic circulation and causes hepatocyte death leading to an increase of circulating bile acids including TCA. TCA crosses the leaky blood brain barrier and binds S1PR2 in neurons. This leads to increased expression and secretion of CCL2 from neurons, which binds receptors on microglia leading to their activation. This ultimately results in increased proinflammatory cytokine expression and worse HE outcomes.