| Literature DB >> 31225483 |
Maria Agnese Della Fazia1, Giuseppe Servillo1.
Abstract
The liver has a unique ability of regenerating after injuries or partial loss of its mass. The mechanisms responsible for liver regeneration - mostly occurring when the hepatic tissue is damaged or functionally compromised by metabolic stress - have been studied in considerable detail over the last few decades, because this phenomenon has both basic-biology and clinical relevance. More specifically, recent interest has been focusing on the widespread occurrence of abnormal nutritional habits in the Western world that result in an increased prevalence of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). NAFLD is closely associated with insulin resistance and dyslipidemia, and it represents a major clinical challenge. The disease may progress to steatohepatitis with persistent inflammation and progressive liver damage, both of which will compromise regeneration under conditions of partial hepatectomy in surgical oncology or in liver transplantation procedures. Here, we analyze the impact of ER stress and SIRT1 in lipid metabolism and in fatty liver pathology, and their consequences on liver regeneration. Moreover, we discuss the fine interplay between ER stress and SIRT1 functioning when contextualized to liver regeneration. An improved understanding of the cellular and molecular intricacies contributing to liver regeneration could be of great clinical relevance in areas as diverse as obesity, metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes, as well as oncology and transplantation.Entities:
Keywords: ER-stress; Fatty Liver; Lipid metabolism; NAFLD; SIRT1; liver regeneration; steatosis
Year: 2018 PMID: 31225483 PMCID: PMC6551800 DOI: 10.15698/cst2018.07.144
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Stress ISSN: 2523-0204
TABLE 1. Summary of effects of Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in various models on liver regeneration.
| High-Fat Diet | IκBα, NF-κB, Cyclin D1 and TNF-α | Development of increased body weight | |
| Steatotic livers to increased injury through IκBα overexpression and subsequent NF-κB inhibition | |||
| Impaired liver regeneration | |||
| db/db mice | VEGF and EGFR | Altered angiogenesis | |
| Impaired liver re generation | |||
| ob/ob mice CCl4 | PEPCK, Cyclin D1 and TNF | Altered rate-limiting enzyme for hepatic gluconeogenesis | |
| Delay of expression of Cyclin D1 was insufficient to drive the cells into S-phase | |||
| Defective TNF release by hepatic Kupffer cells and circulating macrophages induces the impaired hepatocyte proliferation | |||
| ob/ob mice | TNF, IL-6, STAT-3 and p21 | Impaired liver regeneration | |
| dietary fructose compared to dietary fat | CPT-1, PPAR-α, AMPK and Cyp2E1 | Steatosis | |
| Impaired liver regeneration in fatty liver is related to the cause, but not necessarily to the degree, of hepatic steatosis. | |||
| western diet (WD) | TNFR-1, CD95/Fas, Noxa, Bcl2, Bcl-xl, Mcl-1 and HGF | Partial hepatectomy in steatotic liver doesn’t affect hepatocyte apoptosis, despite DR upregulation | |
| WD-induced steatosis enhances liver cell proliferation, which is accompanied by increased HGF and leptin signaling as well as Erk1/2 phosphorylation | |||
| Zucker (fa/fa) rats | PCNA and Cyclin E | Steatosis per se does not impair liver regeneration. | |
| The reduced liver regeneration observed in obese Zucker rats may not be due to fatty infiltration itself but to other factors such as leptin receptor dysfunction. |