| Literature DB >> 29991976 |
Mario Masarone1, Valerio Rosato1, Marcello Dallio2, Antonietta Gerarda Gravina1, Andrea Aglitti1, Carmelina Loguercio2, Alessandro Federico2, Marcello Persico1.
Abstract
Liver steatosis without alcohol consumption, namely, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), is a common hepatic condition that encompasses a wide spectrum of presentations, ranging from simple accumulation of triglycerides in the hepatocytes without any liver damage to inflammation, necrosis, ballooning, and fibrosis (namely, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis) up to severe liver disease and eventually cirrhosis and/or hepatocellular carcinoma. The pathophysiology of fatty liver and its progression is influenced by multiple factors (environmental and genetics), in a "multiple parallel-hit model," in which oxidative stress plays a very likely primary role as the starting point of the hepatic and extrahepatic damage. The aim of this review is to give a comprehensive insight on the present researches and findings on the role of oxidative stress mechanisms in the pathogenesis and pathophysiology of NAFLD. With this aim, we evaluated the available data in basic science and clinical studies in this field, reviewing the most recent works published on this topic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29991976 PMCID: PMC6016172 DOI: 10.1155/2018/9547613
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Mechanisms of mitochondrial dysfunction involved in the production of oxidative stress. An increase of mitochondrial betaoxidation activity, due to a lipid overload, may induce an impairment of electron transport chain, resulting in an “electron leakage.” The reaction between oxygen and protons catalyzed by cytochrome C oxidase (VI complex) is impaired, and electrons may interact directly with oxygen forming ROS. Furthermore, the generation of mitochondrial membrane potential is reduced following the reduction of proton extrusion from the matrix, weakening the activity of ATP synthase. ROS production may exacerbate the mitochondrial dysfunction due to electron leakage following the generation of mtDNA mutation and highly reactive aldehydes (MDA, 4-HNE) produced through lipid peroxidation. Mitochondrial CYP2E1 is a direct source of ROS. A reduction of antioxidant mechanism as GPx and MnSOD was also observed in the NASH model. At last, the incomplete suboptimal oxidation of acyl-carnitine leads to accumulation of lipotoxic intermediates (Cer, DAGs), which can act as an inflammatory intermediate altering the insulin signaling. 4-HNE: 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal; Cer: ceramides; CYP2E1: cytochrome P450 2E1; DAGs: diacylglycerols; FFAs: free fatty acids; GPx: glutathione peroxidase; GSH: glutathione; MDA: malondialdehyde; MnSOD: manganese superoxide dismutase; ROS: reactive oxygen species.
Figure 2Pathway linked to ER stress. Schematic representations of hepatocyte in a fatty liver. A lipid overload, free fatty acids, and cholesterol may induce ER stress leading to “unfolded protein response” in order to reestablish the ER homeostasis. Its prolonged and repetitive activation should trigger a proapoptotic and inflammatory pathway resulting in an increase of oxidative stress. The activity of UPR is fundamentally mediated through three transmembrane stress transducers (PERK, IRE1, and ATF6), which regulate the expression of proinflammatory and antioxidant genes. In a prolonged ER stress condition, the ROS production is also increased by the overexpression of ERO1, an inducible ER oxidoreductase. Saturated fatty acids and ER stress can reduce the activity or SERCA determining a disruption of ER calcium store which can act on mitochondria blocking ETC and forming mPTP resulting in an uncontrolled transition of cytochrome C and other proapoptotic factors into the cytosol. ATF4: activating transcription factor 4; ATF6: activating transcription factor 6; CHOP: C/EBP homologous protein; ER: endoplasmatic reticulum; ERO1: ER oxidoreductin 1; ETC: electron transport chain; IRE1: inositol-requiring signaling protein 1; IRS1: insulin receptor substrate 1; mPTP: mitochondrial permeability transition pore; PERK: protein kinase RNA-like ER kinase; ROS: reactive oxygen species; SERCA: sarco/endoplasmic reticulum CA2+-ATPase; UPR: unfolded protein response.
Figure 3Mechanisms of oxidative stress induced by iron metabolism derangements. The main prooxidizing mechanism is characterized by the production of hydroxyl radical from H2O2 and Fe2+ via Fenton reaction. The main source of H2O2 is the peroxisomal betaoxidation of very long and branched fatty acids. The hydroxyl radicals may generate lipid peroxidation of organelle membranes, leading to impairment of mitochondrial metabolism through the production on mPTP and mtDNA mutation, but also increasing the proapopotitic activity with the production of MDA. Furthermore, the chronic iron overload may also enhance the production of iNOS via NF-κB activation, leading to an increase in nitric oxide and, consequently, to a reaction with the superoxide anion, RNS. At last, the antioxidant mechanism may be inhibited by iron overload, as the activation of BACH-1, a heme-binding factor able to repress the transcription of gene encoding for HO-1, that possesses antioxidant/anti-inflammatory properties. BACH-1: BTB and CNC homology 1; MDA: malondialdehyde; mPTP: mitochondrial permeability transition pore; HO-1: hemoxygenase 1; ROS: reactive oxygen species; RNS: reactive nitrogen species; SOD1: superoxide dismutase 1.
Overview of the major pathophysiological mechanisms involved in oxidative stress in NAFLD addressed within the present paper, with the corresponding references.
| Pathophysiological mechanisms of oxidative stress | Mechanism (with references) | |
|---|---|---|
| Increasing prooxidant | Decreasing antioxidant | |
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | Impairment of oxidative capacity of ETC, resulting in an “electron leakage” [ | GSH depletion with reduction of GPx activity [ |
| Accumulation of Cer and DAGs due to incomplete betaoxidation of acyl-carnitine [ | Reduced activity of MnSOD, polymorphism C47T of SOD2 gene [ | |
| mtDNA mutation [ | Impaired activity of cytochrome C [ | |
| Production of reactive aldehydes (MDA, 4-HNE) through lipid peroxidation [ | ||
| Increase activity of CYP2E1, polymorphism of C2 allele [ | ||
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| ER stress | Prolonged activation of UPR leading to | Prolonged activation of UPR leading to |
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| Iron metabolism derangements | Disruption of peroxisomal membrane [ | GSH depletion—decreased GPx efficiency [ |
| Enhanced iNOS expression via NF-κB activation [ | Inhibition of HO-1 by activation of BACH-1 [ | |
| Production of reactive aldehydes (MDA) through lipid peroxidation [ | Iron actin as a direct competitive antagonist of antioxidant enzymes [ | |
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| Inappropriate inflammatory response mediated by GUT-liver axis | Upregulation of proinflammatory pathways and NADPH oxidase system due to bacterial and bacterial product translocation [ | Lack of inhibition of inflammatory response by NPRL-3 and -6 [ |
| Activation of inflammasomes resulting in cleavage of cytokines precursors (pro-IL1 | ||
| Endogenous alcoholic production by alcohol-producing bacteria [ | ||
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| Insulin resistance and endothelial dysfunction | Upregulation of Ras/MAPK pathway involved in cell proliferation [ | Decrease of eNOS activation due to IR [ |
| Enhanced iNOS activity due to increase expression of proinflammatory cytokines in IR [ | ||
4-HNE: 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal; ATF6: activating transcription factor 6; BACH-1: BTB and CNC homology 1; Cer: ceramides; CHOP: C/EBP homologous protein; CYP2E1: cytochrome P 450 2E1; DAGs: diacylglycerols; ER: endoplasmatic reticulum; ERO1: ER oxidoreductin 1; ETC: electron transport chain; GPx: glutathione peroxidase; GSH: glutathione; HO-1: hemoxygenase 1; IR: insulin resistance; MDA: malondialdehyde; MnSOD: manganese superoxide dismutase; NPRL: NOD-like receptor protein; Nrf2: nuclear factor- (erythroid-derived 2-) like 2; PERK: protein kinase RNA-like ER kinase; SERCA: sarco/endoplasmic reticulum CA2+-ATPase; UPR: unfolded protein response.