| Literature DB >> 30134796 |
Abstract
Liver fibrosis is a precursor of liver cirrhosis, which is associated with increased mortality. Though liver biopsy remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of fibrosis, noninvasive biochemical methods are cost-effective, practical and are not linked with major risks of complications. In this respect, serum hepcidin, has emerged as a new marker of fibrosis and cirrhosis. In this review the discussion uncovers molecular links between hepcidin disturbance and liver fibrosis/cirrhosis. The discussion also expands on clinical studies that suggest that hepcidin can potentially be used as a biochemical parameter of fibrosis/cirrhosis and target of therapeutic strategies to treat liver diseases. The debatable issues such as the complicated nature of hepcidin disturbance in non-alcoholic liver disease, serum levels of hepcidin in acute hepatitis C virus infection, cause of hepcidin disturbance in autoimmune hepatitis and hepatic insulin resistance are discussed, with potential solutions unveiled in order to be studied by future research.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol, HCV, Hepcidin, liver fibrosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30134796 PMCID: PMC6016890 DOI: 10.1186/s10020-018-0008-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Med ISSN: 1076-1551 Impact factor: 6.354
Fig. 1Hepcidin expression and mode of action. BMP6, bone morphogenetic protein 6; BMPR, BMP receptor; ERFE, erythroferrone; Fe, iron; FPN, ferroportin; HAMP, hepcidin antimicrobial peptide; HFE, hemochromatosis protein; IL-6, interleukin 6; IL-6R, IL-6 receptor; JAK2, janus kinase 2; SMAD proteins, s-mothers against decapentaplegic proteins; STAT3, signal transducer and activator of transcription 3; TFR2, transferrin receptor 2. Hepcidin expression is primary regulated by iron-status, inflammation and erythropoietic drive. Iron-status induces hepcidin expression by through BMPR ligands such as BMP6. BMPR activates SMAD pathway which increases hepcidin expression through HAMP transcription. Inflammation induces hepcidin expression through cytokines like IL-6 which activates JAK2/STAT3 pathway in heptocytes. This pathway increases hepcidin expression. Erythropoiesis suppresses hepcidin expression probably through erythroferrone produced by erythrocyte precursors. Once released by hepatocytes in plasma, hepcidin reaches target cells like enterocytes and macrophages, where hepcidin induces FPN degradation. This action reduces iron efflux from cells, because FPN is the major exporter of iron out of cells
Fig. 2Hepcidin (in)actions in normal liver and liver fibrosis. Fe, iron; FPN, ferroportin. In normal liver, hepcidin produced by heptocytes controls iron levels in plasma by preventing excessive iron absorption from enterocytes. In this way hepcidin protects liver form iron-load. But hepcidin can protect liver by inactivating hepatic stellate cells as well. In liver fibrosis low hepcidin causes high iron-load and oxidative stress. Oxidative stress and lack of hepcidin-induced supression of hepatic stellate cells induces their activation, which results in deposition of scar tissue and liver fibrosis
Fig. 3Mechanisms behind low levels of hepcidin in liver disease. BMPR, bone morphogenetic protein receptor; C/EBP alpha, CCAAT enhancer binding protein alpha; HAMP, hepcidin antimicrobial peptide; HCV, hepatitis C virus; HFE, hemochromatosis protein; HH, hemochromatosis; HJV, hemojuvelin; IL-6, interleukin 6; InR, insulin receptor; STAT3, signal transducer and activator of transcription 3; TFR2, transferrin receptor 2; TLR4, toll-like receptor 4. Different pathogenic factors are responsible for low values of hepcidin. In HH mechanisms behind low levels of hepcidin are already known and they include defective signalling though HJV, HFE, TFR2 or through direct inhibition of HAMP gene. Alcohol inhibits hepcidin expression through its actions on C/EBP, but also indirectly through TLR4 pathway. It is believed that TLR4 mediates this action of alcohol through nonparenchymal liver cells, but the paracrine signal responsible for this effect is unknown. HCV also suppresses hepcidin expression through oxidative stress, which inhibits C/EBP and STAT3 actions on HAMP. Cholestasis, on the other hand, suppresses hepcidin expression by inhibiting IL-6/STAT3 pathway. In AILD mechanisms behind low levels of hepcidin are unknown. In hepatic insulin resistance defective insulin signaling is linked with defective hepcidin expression, partially through STAT3 pathway
Role of hepcidin as a biochemical marker in liver diseases
| Condition | Study characteristics | Main results | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alcoholic cirrhosis | Prospective study ( | Cut-off value: < 8 μg/L | Nahon et al. |
| ALD | Serum hepcidin ↓ ( | Dostalikova-Cimburova et al. | |
| Chronic liver disease | Serum hepcidin ↓ ( | Tan et al. | |
| Liver cirrhosis | n = 70 | Serum prohepcidin in all patients ↓ ( | Jaroszewicz et al. |
| Chronic hepatitis and liver cirrhosis | HCV patients ( | Serum prohepcidin ↓ in HCV patients with chronic hepatitis (P = 0.01) and liver cirrhosis ( | Nagashima et al. |
| HCV infection | Liver biopsy from | Serum hepcidin ↓ ( | Tsochatzis et al. |
| HCV infection | Treatment outcomes in | Serum hepcidin ↑ (at 12 h) after treatment with pegylated IFN-α (P < 0.0001) | Ryan et al. |
| HCV infection | Treatment outcomes in | Serum hepcidin ↑ (at week 1) after treatment with pegylated IFN-α ( | van Rijnsoever et al. |
| HCV infection | Treatment outcomes in | Hepcidin/ferritin ratio ↓ ( | Fujita et al. |
| HCV infection | Treatment outcomes | Serum hepcidin ↓ in patients with SVR (but did not reach statistical significance) | Kohjima et al. |
| HCV infection | Serum hepcidin ↓ ( | Girelli et al. | |
| HCV infection | n = 9 | Hepcidin/ferritin ratio ↓ ( | Sugimoto et al. |
| Chronic liver disease | Hepcidin/ferritin ratio ↓ in patients with Child-Pugh score B + C compared to Child-Pugh score A ( | Cakir et al. | |
| HBV-related cirrhosis | Serum hepcidin ↓ ( | Lin et al. | |
| Chronic HBV infection | Serum hepcidin ↓ in cirrhotic HBV infection compared to non-cirrhotic HBV infection ( | Wang et al. | |
| NAFLD | Hepcidin correlates with hepatic lipid content (r = 0.42, | Ryan et al. | |
| NAFLD | Hepcidin is an independent predictor of advanced liver fibrosis [OR = 560.72 (5.98-5255.33); | Jamali et al. | |
| DIOS | Hepcidin resistance indexc ↑( | Rametta et al. | |
| NAFLD, DIOS, HH-HFE, THAL | n = 15 (NAFLD), | Serum hepcidin ↓ in HH-HFE vs controls ( | Ravasi et al. |
| Liver autoimmune diseases vs NAFLD and HBV/HCV infections | AICD (n = 34) | Serum hepcidin ↓ in AIH compared to NAFLD ( | Lyberopoulou et al. |
| Biliary atresia | Hepcidin mRNA ↓ in late stage disease (cirrhosis) compared to early stage disease ( | Huang et al. | |
| HH | n = 5 (HH-HFE), | Hepcidin/ferritin ratio ↓ in untreated HH-HFE | Ganz et al. |
| Iron-overload conditions | n = 13 | Serum hepcidin ↓ in HH-HFE, HH-HJV, HH-TFR2 vs serum hepcidin ↑ in FPN disease ( | Kaneko et al. |
| HFE-HH (C282Y) | Serum hepcidin ↓ in untreated homozygotes ( | van Dijk et al. | |
| HFE-HH (C282Y) | n = 9 | Serum hepcidin ↓ in untreated homozygotes ( | Sangwaiya et al. |
| FPN disease type A | n = 8 | Serum prohepcidin ↑ in untreated patients compared to normal control and treated patients with FPN disease | Zoller et al. |
Abbreviations: AICD autoimmune cholestatic disease, AIH autoimmune hepatitis, ALD alcoholic liver disease, AUC area under curve, DIOS dysmetabolic iron overload syndrome, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, FPN ferroportin, HBV hepatitis B virus, HCC hepatocellular carcinoma, HCV hepatitis C virus, HFE hemochromatosis protein, HH hemochromatosis, HJV hemojuvelin, HR hazard ratio, IFN interferon, NAFLD nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, NASH nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, OR odds ratio, SVR sustained virological response, TFR2 transferrin receptor 2, THAL thalassemia, TS transferrin saturation
Up (↑) and down (↓) arrows are presented to signify changes in levels of biochemical markers or gene expression; down arrow (↓) means that a specific biochemical marker or genetic expression levels are low, while up arrow (↑) means that a specific biochemical marker or genetic expression levels are high
aSignificance was observed between patients with liver conditions (ALD, AIH, HBV infection, HCV infection, NAFLD, PBC, PSC) and disease-control subjects (non-liver rheumatological, renal and hematological disease)
bSignificance was observed between patients with liver conditions (ALD, AIH, HBV infection, HCV infection, NAFLD, PBC, PSC) and disease-control subjects (non-liver rheumatological, renal and hematological disease) and healthy controls
cHepcidin resistance index is defined as the ability of hepcidin spike to control the rise in TS
dIn HH-HFE homozygotes with high ferritin levels levels of hepcidin were lower than controls, but did not reach statistical significance