The Department of Pathology, University of Pittsburgh, School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261.
The Department of Pathology, University of Pittsburgh, School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261; Pittsburgh Liver Research Center, School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; McGowan Institute of Regenerative Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2022;13(2):565-582. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2021.10.007. Epub 2021 Oct 29.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is a frequent cause of hepatic dysfunction and is now a global epidemic. This ailment can progress to an advanced form called nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and end-stage liver disease. Currently, the molecular basis of NASH pathogenesis is poorly understood, and no effective therapies exist to treat NASH. These shortcomings are due to the paucity of experimental NASH models directly relevant to humans.
We used chimeric mice with humanized liver to investigate nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in a relevant model. We carried out histologic, biochemical, and molecular approaches including RNA-Seq. For comparison, we used side-by-side human NASH samples.
Herein, we describe a "humanized" model of NASH using transplantation of human hepatocytes into fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase-deficient mice. Once fed a high-fat diet, these mice develop NAFLD faithfully, recapitulating human NASH at the histologic, cellular, biochemical, and molecular levels. Our RNA-Seq analyses uncovered that a variety of important signaling pathways that govern liver homeostasis are profoundly deregulated in both humanized and human NASH livers. Notably, we made the novel discovery that hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) function is compromised in human and humanized NASH at several levels including a significant increase in the expression of the HGF antagonists known as NK1/NK2 and marked decrease in HGF activator. Based on these observations, we generated a potent, human-specific, and stable agonist of human MET that we have named META4 (Metaphor) and used it in the humanized NASH model to restore HGF function.
Our studies revealed that the humanized NASH model recapitulates human NASH and uncovered that HGF-MET function is impaired in this disease. We show that restoring HGF-MET function by META4 therapy ameliorates NASH and reinstates normal liver function in the humanized NASH model. Our results show that the HGF-MET signaling pathway is a dominant regulator of hepatic homeostasis.
非酒精性脂肪性肝病是肝功能障碍的常见原因,现已成为全球性流行疾病。这种疾病可进展为一种称为非酒精性脂肪性肝炎(NASH)的晚期形式和终末期肝病。目前,NASH 发病机制的分子基础尚不清楚,也没有有效的治疗方法来治疗 NASH。这些缺点是由于缺乏与人类直接相关的实验性 NASH 模型所致。
我们使用具有人源化肝脏的嵌合小鼠来研究相关模型中的非酒精性脂肪性肝病。我们进行了组织学、生化和分子方法学研究,包括 RNA-Seq。为了进行比较,我们还使用了并列的人类 NASH 样本。
在此,我们描述了一种使用人源化肝细胞移植到延胡索酰乙酰乙酸水解酶缺陷型小鼠中建立的 NASH“人源化”模型。一旦给予高脂肪饮食,这些小鼠就会忠实地发展为 NAFLD,在组织学、细胞、生化和分子水平上重现人类 NASH。我们的 RNA-Seq 分析揭示了各种调节肝脏内稳态的重要信号通路在人源化和人类 NASH 肝脏中均受到严重调节。值得注意的是,我们有了一个新的发现,即肝细胞生长因子(HGF)在人源化和人类 NASH 中的功能受到多种水平的损害,包括已知的 HGF 拮抗剂 NK1/NK2 的表达显著增加以及 HGF 激活物的显著减少。基于这些观察结果,我们生成了一种有效的、人特异性的、稳定的人 MET 激动剂,我们将其命名为 META4(Metaphor),并在人源化 NASH 模型中使用它来恢复 HGF 功能。
我们的研究表明,人源化 NASH 模型重现了人类 NASH,并揭示了 HGF-MET 功能在这种疾病中受损。我们表明,通过 META4 治疗恢复 HGF-MET 功能可改善 NASH 并恢复人源化 NASH 模型中的正常肝功能。我们的研究结果表明,HGF-MET 信号通路是肝脏内稳态的主要调节因子。