AI Article Synopsis

  • Alcoholic liver disease (ALD) is a significant cause of liver-related deaths and is characterized by chronic liver damage due to excessive alcohol consumption.
  • This research investigates how nodakenin (NK) can help manage ALD by influencing liver inflammation and fat metabolism through a signaling pathway involving Nur77 and P2X7r.
  • NK treatment showed promising results in reducing liver damage indicators, inflammation, and fat production in both lab and mouse models, suggesting it could be an effective therapy for ALD.

Article Abstract

Alcoholic liver disease (ALD) is the main factor that induces liver-related death worldwide and represents a common chronic hepatopathy resulting from binge or chronic alcohol consumption. This work focused on revealing the role and molecular mechanism of nodakenin (NK) in ALD associated with hepatic inflammation and lipid metabolism through the regulation of Nur77-P2X7r signaling. In this study, an ALD model was constructed through chronic feeding of Lieber-DeCarli control solution with or without NK treatment. Ethanol (EtOH) or NK was administered to AML-12 cells, after which Nur77 was silenced. HepG2 cells were exposed to ethanol (EtOH) and subsequently treated with recombinant Nur77 (rNur77). Mouse peritoneal macrophages (MPMs) were treated with lipopolysaccharide/adenosine triphosphate (LPS/ATP) and NK, resulting in the generation of conditioned media. In vivo, histopathological alterations were markedly alleviated by NK, accompanied by reductions in serum triglyceride (TG), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels and the modulation of Lipin-1, SREBP1, and Nur77 levels in comparison to the EtOH-exposed group ( < 0.001). Additionally, NK reduced the production of P2X7r and NLRP3. NK markedly upregulated Nur77, inhibited P2X7r and Lipin-1, and promoted the function of Cytosporone B, a Nur77 agonist ( < 0.001). Moreover, Nur77 deficiency weakened the regulatory effect of NK on P2X7r and Lipin-1 inhibition ( < 0.001). In NK-exposed MPMs, cleaved caspase-1 and mature IL-1β expression decreased following LPS/ATP treatment ( < 0.001). NK also decreased inflammatory-factor production in primary hepatocytes stimulated with MPM supernatant. NK ameliorated ETOH-induced ALD through a reduction in inflammation and lipogenesis factors, which was likely related to Nur77 activation. Hence, NK is a potential therapeutic approach to ALD.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10935048PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules29051078DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Alcoholic liver disease (ALD) is a significant cause of liver-related deaths and is characterized by chronic liver damage due to excessive alcohol consumption.
  • This research investigates how nodakenin (NK) can help manage ALD by influencing liver inflammation and fat metabolism through a signaling pathway involving Nur77 and P2X7r.
  • NK treatment showed promising results in reducing liver damage indicators, inflammation, and fat production in both lab and mouse models, suggesting it could be an effective therapy for ALD.
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