Articles

Notch-mediated hepatocyte MCP-1 secretion causes liver fibrosis

Kang, Jinku; Postigo-Fernandez, Jorge; Kim, KyeongJin; Zhu, Changyu; Yu, Junjie; Meroni, Marica; Mayfield, Brent; Bartolomé, Alberto; Dapito, Dianne H.; Ferrante, Anthony W.; Dongiovanni, Paola; Valenti, Luca; Creusot, Remi J.; Pajvani, Utpal B.

Patients with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) have increased expression of liver monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), but its cellular source and contribution to various aspects of NASH pathophysiology remain debated. We demonstrated increased liver CCL2 (which encodes MCP-1) expression in patients with NASH, and commensurately, a 100-fold increase in hepatocyte Ccl2 expression in a mouse model of NASH, accompanied by increased liver monocyte-derived macrophage (MoMF) infiltrate and liver fibrosis. To test repercussions of increased hepatocyte-derived MCP-1, we generated hepatocyte-specific Ccl2-knockout mice, which showed reduced liver MoMF infiltrate as well as decreased liver fibrosis. Forced hepatocyte MCP-1 expression provoked the opposite phenotype in chow-fed wild-type mice. Consistent with increased hepatocyte Notch signaling in NASH, we observed a close correlation between markers of Notch activation and CCL2 expression in patients with NASH. We found that an evolutionarily conserved Notch/recombination signal binding protein for immunoglobulin kappa J region binding site in the Ccl2 promoter mediated transactivation of the Ccl2 promoter in NASH diet–fed mice. Increased liver MoMF infiltrate and liver fibrosis seen in opposite gain-of-function mice was ameliorated with concomitant hepatocyte Ccl2 knockout or CCR2 inhibitor treatment. Hepatocyte Notch activation prompts MCP-1–dependent increase in liver MoMF infiltration and fibrosis.

Files

  • thumnail for Kang et al. - 2023 - Notch-mediated hepatocyte MCP-1 secretion causes l.pdf Kang et al. - 2023 - Notch-mediated hepatocyte MCP-1 secretion causes l.pdf application/pdf 723 KB Download File

Also Published In

More About This Work

Academic Units
Medicine
Published Here
February 5, 2025