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Fructose stimulated de novo lipogenesis is promoted by inflammation.

Citation
Todoric, J., et al. “Fructose Stimulated De Novo Lipogenesis Is Promoted By Inflammation.”. Nature Metabolism, pp. 1034-1045.
Center UCSD-UCLA
Author Jelena Todoric, Giuseppe Di Caro, Saskia Reibe, Darren C Henstridge, Courtney R Green, Alison Vrbanac, Fatih Ceteci, Claire Conche, Reginald McNulty, Shabnam Shalapour, Koji Taniguchi, Peter J Meikle, Jeramie D Watrous, Rafael Moranchel, Mahan Najhawan, Mohit Jain, Xiao Liu, Tatiana Kisseleva, Maria T Diaz-Meco, Jorge Moscat, Rob Knight, Florian R Greten, Lester F Lau, Christian M Metallo, Mark A Febbraio, Michael Karin
Abstract

Benign hepatosteatosis, affected by lipid uptake, de novo lipogenesis and fatty acid (FA) oxidation, progresses to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) on stress and inflammation. A key macronutrient proposed to increase hepatosteatosis and NASH risk is fructose. Excessive intake of fructose causes intestinal-barrier deterioration and endotoxaemia. However, how fructose triggers these alterations and their roles in hepatosteatosis and NASH pathogenesis remain unknown. Here we show, using mice, that microbiota-derived Toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists promote hepatosteatosis without affecting fructose-1-phosphate (F1P) and cytosolic acetyl-CoA. Activation of mucosal-regenerative gp130 signalling, administration of the YAP-induced matricellular protein CCN1 or expression of the antimicrobial peptide Reg3b (beta) peptide counteract fructose-induced barrier deterioration, which depends on endoplasmic-reticulum stress and subsequent endotoxaemia. Endotoxin engages TLR4 to trigger TNF production by liver macrophages, thereby inducing lipogenic enzymes that convert F1P and acetyl-CoA to FA in both mouse and human hepatocytes.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Nature metabolism
Volume
2
Issue
10
Number of Pages
1034-1045
Date Published
12/2020
ISSN Number
2522-5812
DOI
10.1038/s42255-020-0261-2
Alternate Journal
Nat Metab
PMID
32839596
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