| Literature DB >> 35501558 |
Aigli-Ioanna Legaki1, Ioannis I Moustakas1, Michalina Sikorska1, Grigorios Papadopoulos1, Rallia-Iliana Velliou1, Antonios Chatzigeorgiou2,3.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF THE REVIEW: Mitochondrial dysfunction has long been proposed to play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of a considerable number of disorders, such as neurodegeneration, cancer, cardiovascular, and metabolic disorders, including obesity-related insulin resistance and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Mitochondria are highly dynamic organelles that undergo functional and structural adaptations to meet the metabolic requirements of the cell. Alterations in nutrient availability or cellular energy needs can modify their formation through biogenesis and the opposite processes of fission and fusion, the fragmentation, and connection of mitochondrial network areas respectively. Herein, we review and discuss the current literature on the significance of mitochondrial adaptations in obesity and metabolic dysregulation, emphasizing on the role of hepatocyte mitochondrial flexibility in obesity and NAFLD. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Energy metabolism; Liver; Mitochondrial bioenergetics; Mitochondrial dysfunction; NAFLD; NASH
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35501558 PMCID: PMC9399061 DOI: 10.1007/s13679-022-00473-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Obes Rep ISSN: 2162-4968
Fig. 1Mitochondrial dynamics: the process of fission and fusion. Mitochondrial fission is regulated by Drp1 and FIS1, which compress and separate mitochondrial tubules. Under conditions of low energy demand, fission facilitates uncoupled respiration, resulting to reduced ATP synthesis. Oppositely, during fusion, Mfn1/2 and OPA1 integrate the OMMs and IMMs. Mitochondrial fusion is stimulated by energy demand and stress and leads to upregulation of metabolic competence. Drp1, dynamin-like/related protein 1; FIS1, mitochondrial fission 1 protein; Mfn1, mitofusin 1; Mfn2, mitofusin 2; OPA1, optic atrophy 1; OMM; outer mitochondrial membrane; IMM, inner mitochondrial membrane
Fig. 2Hepatic mitochondrial adaptations in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). In NAFLD, rapid accumulation of triglycerides (TGs) in the liver, due to high availability of free fatty acids (FFAs), and/or de novo lipogenesis (DNL) is associated with an elevated mitochondrial oxidative activity. The cytoplasmic FFAs are first converted into fatty acyl-CoA which is relocated to mitochondria to be decomposed via β-oxidation and produce acetyl-CoA. Increased FFA influx leads to insufficient hepatic β-oxidation and therefore, lipotoxic intermediates accumulate, triggering inflammation and disrupting insulin signaling. In contrast, the utilization of acetyl-CoA by the mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle continues unabated to meet the energetic demands of gluconeogenesis. Mitochondrial β-oxidation generates NADH and flavine-adenine dinucleotide (FADH2), the electrons (e-) of which are transferred to the electron transport chain (ETC). Disruption of the electron flow within the ETC induces leakage of electrons and the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), contributing to NAFLD progression, mainly by triggering hepatocyte stress and damage. Furthermore, when hepatocytes are exposed to excessive nutrient overload and FFAs, mitochondria become disintegrated through increased fission. DNL, de novo lipogenesis; TGs, triglycerides; OMM; outer mitochondrial membrane; IMM, inner mitochondrial membrane; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; Drp1, dynamin-like/related protein 1. Pathways and procedures that are increased are designated by ↑
Major human studies on mitochondrial adaptation in NAFLD
-Controls (8) and NAFLD patients (20) -Patients with NASH at different stages (10) and patients with moderate of advanced fibrosis (14) -Unrelated patients with NAFLD (NAFL = 62, NASH = 76) and healthy individuals (100) | Liver biopsies Serum samples PBMCs | Deep coverage whole genome sequencing in hepatic mitochondrial genome with NGS | -Hepatic mtDNA of NAFLD patients harbors intricate mitochondrial genomes with a notably ↑ mutation rate versus controls -In patients with ↑ fibrosis the severity of NAFLD is associated with ↑number of OXPHO-related hepatic mtDNA mutation-carrying variants | -Using NGS, the number of reads could probably limit the sensitivity to detect low frequency heteroplasmic variants and somatic mutations -Mitochondrial genetics differ from nuclear genetic -No functional data to support the effect of missence mutations | |
Controls (18) NAFLD patients (45) | Liver biopsies | -Biochemical evaluation -Histopathological evaluation -Bisulfite treatment of DNA and methylation specific PCR -qPCR | -↑ hepatic mtDNA methylation affecting the transcriptional activity of MT-ND6 participates in modulation of histological severity of NAFLD leading to NASH | None | |
Obese IR patients w/o NAFLD (18) Obese IR patients with NAFLD (16) Obese IR patients with NASH (17) Lean individuals (12) | Liver biopsies Serum samples | -Metabolic characterization -Histology -Immunoblotting -Mitochondrial respiration evaluation -Oxidative stress evaluation -qPCR | -↑ OXPHOS effectiveness in liver mitochondria obtained from early stages of NAFLD patients -↓ OXPHOS effectiveness in liver mitochondria of NASH patients | -Insulin infusion -FCCP-induced maximum uncoupled respiration -ADP-stimulated respiration -There is no standard method for associating mitochondrial function to mitochondrial content | |
| NAFLD patients (252) | Liver biopsies | -MT-CYB sequencing and analysis of mtDNA damage -Global liver transcriptome analysis | -NASH correlation with genetic changes of liver cellular respirasome (↑ cytochrome b variations, mtDNA damage) resulting to severe respirasome supercomplex inadequacy and cell death | Modest sample size | |
Controls (12) NAFLD patients (12) | Liver biopsies Plasma samples Huh7.5 cell line | -Hepatocyte isolation from human liver biopsies -Co-culture of Huh7.5/primary human hepatocytes by using Transwell inserts -Mitochondrial ROS, ROS-Glo H202 quantification -Immunoblotting | -Exposure of primary human hepatocytes to plasma from NAFLD patients results to ↓ hepatocyte viability and ↓ mitochondrial membrane potential, ↑ ROS, ↑ H202 production compared to those treated with plasma from healthy individuals | None | |
Controls (10) NAFLD patients with fibrosis (10) NAFLD patients with severe fibrosis (10) | PBMCs | -Mitochondrial functional analysis with Seahorse XFp In PBMCs -Global metabolomics -ELISA | -NAFLD progression is associated with mitochondrial dysfunctions related to changes in metabolites of the urea cycle (↓ hepatic mitochondrial respiratory capacity, significant changes in 5 out of 14 metabolites of the urea cycle in patients with progressed fibrosis in comparison to mild/moderate fibrosis) | -Limited number of samples -Lack of liver tissue to measure gene expression of the urea cycle enzymes | |
| Healthy individuals with varying BMI (19) | Liver biopsies | -MR Spectrometry | -↓ liver ATP stores are more common in overweight and obese individuals | Modest sample size |
Major Animal studies on mitochondrial adaptation in NAFLD
-ob/ob mice -PPARa-deficient ob/ob mice | Liver | -Glucose tolerance and insulin resistance -Biochemical assays -Histology, immunohistochemistry -Immunoblotting -Northen blotting and qPCR | -Knockout of PPARa ↑ obesity and ↑ hepatic steatosis due to ↓ FAO | None | |
LCAD-/- mice WT mice | Liver | -Hyperinsulinemic-Euglycemic clamp -Biochemical assays -qPCR | -Lack of LCAD predispose mice to liver steatosis and insulin resistance | None | |
| Liver- and Muscle-Specific AIF -/- mice | Liver muscle Adipose tissue | -Glucose and insulin tolerance tests -Hyperinsulinemic clamp -Indirect calorimetry -Immunoblotting -Mircoarray analyses -Determination of intracellular metabolites -Histology -Mitochondrial DNA quantification | -Mitochondrial dysfunctions in respiratory activity may induce insulin-sensitive metabolic condition, protecting against the adipogenic and diabetogenic effects of HFD in muscle- and liver-specific AIF knockout mice | None | |
| Transgenic mice expressing DLP1-K38A in a doxycycline-inducible manner | Liver | -Histology and immunohistochemistry -Mitochondrial morphology assessment -Isolation of Primary hepatocyte and treatments -Oxygen consumption analyses | -Transgenic inhibition of mitochondrial fission is protective against hepatic steatosis, ameliorating HFD-induced oxidative stress, and liver damage, suggesting a mechanistic role of mitochondrial fission in regulating hepatic lipid regulation and oxidative stress associated with NAFLD | None | |
| Mice with hepatocyte-specific deletion of MFF (MffLi -/- mice) | Liver | -Isolation of primary hepatocytes isolated from MffLiKO -Metabolic and biochemical evaluations -qPCR -Immunoblotting -Mitochondria isolation experiments | -Hepatic deletion of mitochondrial fission factor (MFF) stimulates ER stress and ↓ the secretion of triglycerides in the liver -MffLiKO mice are more susceptable to NASH phenotypes caused by HFD than control mice | Further studies needed to delineate the correlation of mitochondrial fission with the regulation of glucose metabolism | |
CXCR3-/- mice WT mice | -TEM -Mitochondria isolation from liver, Mitochondria membrane potential, mtDNA damage analysis -Immunoblotting, Immunofluorescence -FACS -qPCR -siRNA transfection for CXCR3 knockdown -ATP measurement | -CXCR3 ↓ the protein levels of Mfn1, thereby causing mitochondrial deterioration in animal models of NASH | None | ||
| Liver-specific Mfn2 KO mice | Liver Skeletal muscle Adipose tissue | -Isolation of mouse hepatocytes -High-resolution respirometry with the Oxygraph-2 k and Seahorse Bioscience XF | -Specific hepatic ablation of Mfn2 resulted to ↑ hepatic ER activity, leading to metabolic dysregulations, deteriorated glucose tolerance and insulin resistance in HFD-mice -Mfn2 coordinates mitochondria and ER function, leading to modulation of insulin signaling and glucose homeostasis in vivo | None | |
TG2-/- mice WT mice | Liver Serum samples | -Metabolic and biochemical evaluations -Histopathological analysis -Transmission electron ultrastructural analysis -Immunoblotting | -↑ mitochondrial fission when subjected to HFD -TG2 activation may offer protection in the context of NAFLD | None |