Multiomics analyses decipher intricate changes in the cellular and metabolic landscape of steatotic livers upon dietary restriction and sleeve gastrectomy

Author:

Chen Shuai,Zeng Qinghe,Cai XiurongORCID,Xue Jiaming,Song Peng,Tang Liming,Klein ChristopheORCID,Tacke FrankORCID,Guillot AdrienORCID,Liu HanyangORCID

Abstract

AbstractMetabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is a chronic, progressive liver disease that encompasses a spectrum of steatosis, steatohepatitis (or MASH), and fibrosis. Evidence suggests that dietary restriction (DR) and sleeve gastrectomy (SG) can lead to remission of hepatic steatosis and inflammation through weight loss, but it is unclear whether these procedures induce distinct metabolic or immunological changes in MASLD livers. This study aims to elucidate the intricate hepatic changes following DR, SG or sham surgery in rats fed a high-fat diet as a model of obesity-related MASLD, in comparison to a clinical cohort of patients undergoing SG. Single-cell and single-nuclei transcriptome analysis, spatial metabolomics, and immunohistochemistry revealed the liver landscape, while circulating biomarkers were measured in serum samples. Artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted image analysis characterized the spatial distribution of hepatocytes, myeloid cells and lymphocytes. In patients and experimental MASLD rats, SG improved BMI, circulating liver injury biomarkers and triglyceride levels. Both DR and SG attenuated liver steatosis and fibrosis in rats. Metabolism-related genes (Ppara,Cyp2e1andCyp7a1) were upregulated in hepatocytes upon DR and SG, while SG broadly upregulated lipid metabolism on cholangiocytes, monocytes, macrophages, and neutrophils. Furthermore, SG promoted myeloid cell accumulation in the liver not only ameliorating inflammation but activating liver repair processes. Regions with potent myeloid infiltration were marked with enhanced metabolic capacities upon SG. Additionally, a disruption of periportal hepatocyte functions was observed upon DR. In conclusion, this study indicates a dynamic cellular crosstalk in steatotic livers undergoing SG. Notably, PPARα- and gut-liver axis-related processes, and metabolically-active myeloid cell infiltration indicate intervention-related mechanisms supporting SG for the treatment of MASLD.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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