Perturbation of mitochondrial dynamics in Alcoholic Liver Disease.

Journal of World Mitochondria Society(2016)

引用 1|浏览23
暂无评分
摘要
In Europe alcohol consumption causes 6.5% of deaths and Alcoholic Liver Disease (ALD) is the predominant cause of liver disease[1]. In the pathogenesis of ALD the involvement of mitochondria is well established[2, 3], morphological alterations (megamitochondria) in the liver biopsies of patients are recognised as hallmarks of ALD[4]. However, the impact of alcohol on mitochondrial dynamics and mitochondria-shaping proteins (MSP) remains unknown. The effect of alcohol was investigated in vitro (hepatoma cells), ex vivo (human liver slices) and in 55 patients with ALD. The analysis by confocal/electron microscopy revealed an initial mitochondrial hyper-fragmentation induced by short-term ethanol treatment, preceding cell injury or mitochondrial dysfunction; while megamitochondria developed as a consequence of longer exposure. These structural modifications were associated with changes in the MSP regulating fragmentation but not fusion (gene/protein expression), in particular in Dynamin related protein-1 (Drp-1) and its receptors MiD51 and Mff. When Drp-1 was inactivated, the cells shown abrogation of ethanol-induced hyper-fragmentation and increased megamitochondria formation, suggesting that both phenomena are induced by alcohol via Drp-1. The pivotal role of Drp-1 in ALD was confirmed in liver biopsies of patients with alcoholic hepatitis, opening new perspectives in the development of therapies aimed to modulate its activity.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要