NFATc1 signaling drives chronic ER stress responses to promote NAFLD progression

Author:

Latif Muhammad Umair,Schmidt Geske Elisabeth,Mercan Sercan,Rahman Raza,Gibhardt Christine SilviaORCID,Stejerean-Todoran IoanaORCID,Reutlinger Kristina,Hessmann Elisabeth,Singh Shiv KORCID,Moeed Abdul,Rehman Abdul,Butt Umer Javed,Bohnenberger Hanibal,Stroebel Philipp,Bremer Sebastian ChristopherORCID,Neesse AlbrechtORCID,Bogeski Ivan,Ellenrieder VolkerORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesNon-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) can persist in the stage of simple hepatic steatosis or progress to steatohepatitis (NASH) with an increased risk for cirrhosis and cancer. We examined the mechanisms controlling the progression to severe NASH in order to develop future treatment strategies for this disease.DesignNFATc1 activation and regulation was examined in livers from patients with NAFLD, cultured and primary hepatocytes and in transgenic mice with differential hepatocyte-specific expression of the transcription factor (Alb-cre, NFATc1c.a. andNFATc1Δ/Δ). Animals were fed with high-fat western diet (WD) alone or in combination with tauroursodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA), a candidate drug for NAFLD treatment. NFATc1-dependent ER stress-responses, NLRP3 inflammasome activation and disease progression were assessed both in vitro and in vivo.ResultsNFATc1 expression was weak in healthy livers but strongly induced in advanced NAFLD stages, where it correlates with liver enzyme values as well as hepatic inflammation and fibrosis. Moreover, high-fat WD increased NFATc1 expression, nuclear localisation and activation to promote NAFLD progression, whereas hepatocyte-specific depletion of the transcription factor can prevent mice from disease acceleration. Mechanistically, NFATc1 drives liver cell damage and inflammation through ER stress sensing and activation of the PERK-CHOP unfolded protein response (UPR). Finally, NFATc1-induced disease progression towards NASH can be blocked by TUDCA administration.ConclusionNFATc1 stimulates NAFLD progression through chronic ER stress sensing and subsequent activation of terminal UPR signalling in hepatocytes. Interfering with ER stress-responses, for example, by TUDCA, protects fatty livers from progression towards manifest NASH.

Funder

the Volkswagen-Stiftung

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

German Cancer Aid

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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