metabolic dysfunction
Latest
Hepatotoxicity of Legacy and Replacement PFAS: Role of BRUCE-Mitochondrial Interactions
Epidemiological studies have shown a strong association between exposure to PFAS (Per- and Poly- fluoroalkyl Substances) and liver toxicity. Particularly, legacy C8-PFAS members, PFOS (perfluorooctane sulfonate) and PFOA (perfluorooctanoic acid), are highly toxic, with PFOS estimated to be approximately 10 times more toxic than PFOA in ecotoxicity models. Consequently, PFAS replacements such as GenX and PFBS are marketed as safe alternatives, although growing evidence indicates that these substitutes also exhibit toxic effects. Lab animal model studies have shown hepatotoxic effects of both legacy and replacement PFAS members, characterized by Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) and its severe form Metabolic dysfunction- associated steatohepatitis (MASH), the two chronic liver diseases affecting an estimated 80-100 million Americans. The broader objective of this project is to understand the underlying mechanisms of PFAS hepatotoxicity in MASLD/MASH. In this context, our initial studies have shown that PFAS exposure of mice downregulates hepatic BRUCE, an autophagy inhibitor, resulting in development of MASLD in WT, and more severe MASLD and even progression to MASH in BRUCE liver-knockdown (BKO) mice. Using primary hepatocytes, we found PFAS-induced BRUCE reduction compromised mitochondrial (mt) functions (respiration, fatty acid oxidation/FAO, and ATP production) and suppressed mitophagy in WT and more so in BKO mice. Pharmacological restoration of mt function in mice prevented PFAS-induced MASLD/MASH. Guided by these compelling preliminary data and scientific premise, we hypothesize that PFAS degradation of BRUCE in hepatocytes induces excessive autophagy (resulting in cytotoxicity) and inhibits mitophagy (resulting in accumulation of damaged mitochondria), leading to release of mtDAMPs to activate inflammation/ fibrosis, thereby facilitating progression from MASLD to MASH. We will test this by three specific aims. Aim 1 (ex vivo) is to determine the human-relevant PFAS doses that modulate BRUCE levels for homeostatic vs cytotoxic autophagy and how BRUCE in turn regulates autophagy. Aim 2 (ex vivo) will investigate BRUCE-driven mitophagy pathway specific to PFAS exposure at human-relevant doses. Aim 3 (ex vivo and in vivo) will involve ex vivo simulation experiments to characterize the role of PFAS-induced, BRUCE-dependent hepatocyte- released mt DAMPs in activation of immune and fibrogenic cells using co-culture assays. Next, we will perform in vivo intervention to validate the role of PFAS-damaged mitochondria in driving MASH progression in mouse models. Furthermore, human relevance of the delineated mechanisms will be ascertained and validated using iPSC-derived human liver organoid system. Impact: This project will advance our understanding of autophagy/mitophagy-centric mechanisms with therapeutic potential in the context of PFAS-induced liver disease MASLD/MASH.
Effects of Apolipoprotein A4 on Lipid Metabolism via Sympathetic Regulation
Obesity increases the risks and progression of hypertriglyceridemia, metabolic dysfunction- associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), and cardiovascular diseases. Previous studies demonstrate that a single injection of apolipoprotein A4 (APOA4) elevates sympathetic neural activity and fatty acid β-oxidation in adipose tissues; and consistent infusion of APOA4 in obese mice fed a high-fat diet lowers fat mass, reduces hypertriglyceridemia, elevates brown adipose tissue thermogenesis, and attenuates steatosis and enhances sympathetic neural activity in the liver. This project hypothesizes that APOA4 reduces hypertriglyceridemia by regulating lipid metabolism through sympathetic stimulation in adipose tissues (Specific Aim 1) and sympathetic action in the liver (Specific Aim 2). The role of sympathetic action via the neurotransmitter norepinephrine and adrenergic receptor-mediated pathways will be investigated, and their necessity in APOA4-mediated lipid metabolism will be tested. A strength of this project is the interdisciplinary collaboration between investigators with established successful collaboration and publications. The project will provide physiological, molecular, and neurochemical mechanisms underlying how APOA4 differentially regulates metabolism through sympathetic activation in various types of adipose tissues and the liver in male and female obese mice. Findings would provide impetus to develop unique, novel, targeted therapeutic applications against hypertriglyceridemia and MASLD. Importantly, this project will expose undergraduates and graduate students to meritorious research, provide students with hands-on biomedical research experience, and strengthen research environment at R15 eligible institutions.
Programming Offspring Metabolism: The Role of Milk Extracellular Vesicles in Fat Development
SUMMARY Obesity is a global health crisis, contributing significantly to the prevalence of metabolic disorders, cardiovascular diseases, and various chronic conditions. A growing body of evidence suggests that maternal obesity during pregnancy and lactation can predispose offspring to obesity and metabolic dysfunction later in life. However, the mechanisms by which maternal obesity programs these adverse outcomes in offspring remain poorly understood. Breast milk is not only a source of essential nutrients but also contains bioactive components, including extracellular vesicles (EVs), which play crucial roles in cellular communication and development. Recent studies have shown that EVs can survive digestion and enter the infant’s circulation, influencing immune and metabolic development. Despite the established link between maternal obesity and altered breast milk composition, no study has investigated the role of milk-derived EVs (mEVs) in programming offspring fat development and metabolism. Understanding this novel pathway could revolutionize our approach to preventing intergenerational transmission of obesity. Our preliminary studies using a mouse model of maternal high-fat diet-induced obesity revealed significant alterations in mEV biogenesis and cargo composition, including changes in specific miRNAs. Oral administration of mEVs from obese dams to neonatal mice increased adiposity and impaired lipid metabolism, indicating that mEVs are crucial in modulating fat development and metabolic pathways in offspring. Several key miRNAs found in mouse mEVs are conserved in human milk EVs, highlighting the potential translational relevance of our findings to human health. We hypothesize that mEVs are critical mediators of maternal obesity’s programming effects on offspring metabolism and adiposity. In specific aim 1, we will use mouse models and advanced molecular techniques (miRNA sequencing, proteomics, and lipidomics) to characterize how maternal obesity affects mEV biogenesis and the composition of their bioactive cargo. We will also evaluate how maternal dietary intake, independent of obesity, influences mEV composition. Specific aim 2 will define the programming effects of mEVs on offspring energy metabolism and obesity. In addition, we will explore whether human milk EVs from lean and obese mothers exert similar programming effects on fat development and metabolism in a mouse model. This R21 application embodies a high-risk, high-reward approach to obesity research. It ventures into uncharted territory by proposing that mEVs are novel regulators of metabolic programming, a concept that has not been explored in prior studies. The potential reward is substantial: discovering a new mechanism by which maternal obesity influences offspring health could fundamentally shift our understanding of early-life metabolic programming and lead to innovative strategies for obesity prevention. If successful, this research could open a new field of study with broad implications for maternal and child health.
Impact of High Fat Diet on Central Cardiac Circuits: When The Wanderer is Lost
Cardiac vagal motor drive originates in the brainstem's cardiac vagal motor neurons (CVNs). Despite well-established cardioinhibitory functions in health, our understanding of CVNs in disease is limited. There is a clear connection of cardiovascular regulation with metabolic and energy expenditure systems. Using high fat diet as a model, this talk will explore how metabolic dysfunction impacts the regulation of cardiac tissue through robust inhibition of CVNs. Specifically, it will present an often overlooked modality of inhibition, tonic gamma-aminobuytric acid (GABA) A-type neurotransmission using an array of techniques from single cell patch clamp electrophysiology to transgenic in vivo whole animal physiology. It also will highlight a unique interaction with the delta isoform of protein kinase C to facilitate GABA A-type receptor expression.
Metabolic-functional coupling of parvalbmunin-positive GABAergic interneurons in the injured and epileptic brain
Parvalbumin-positive GABAergic interneurons (PV-INs) provide inhibitory control of excitatory neuron activity, coordinate circuit function, and regulate behavior and cognition. PV-INs are uniquely susceptible to loss and dysfunction in traumatic brain injury (TBI) and epilepsy but the cause of this susceptibility is unknown. One hypothesis is that PV-INs use specialized metabolic systems to support their high-frequency action potential firing and that metabolic stress disrupts these systems, leading to their dysfunction and loss. Metabolism-based therapies can restore PV-IN function after injury in preclinical TBI models. Based on these findings, we hypothesize that (1) PV-INs are highly metabolically specialized, (2) these specializations are lost after TBI, and (3) restoring PV-IN metabolic specializations can improve PV-IN function as well as TBI-related outcomes. Using novel single-cell approaches, we can now quantify cell-type-specific metabolism in complex tissues to determine whether PV-IN metabolic dysfunction contributes to the pathophysiology of TBI.
Improving the identification of cardiometabolic risk in early psychosis
People with chronic schizophrenia die on average 10-15 years sooner than the general population, mostly due to physical comorbidity. While sociodemographic, chronic lifestyle and iatrogenic factors are important contributors to this comorbidity, a growing body of research is beginning to suggest that early signs of cardiometabolic dysfunction may be present from the onset of psychosis in some young adults, and may even be detectable before the onset of psychosis. Given that primary prevention is the best means to prevent the onset of more chronic and severe cardiometabolic phenotypes such as CVD, there is clear need to be able to identify young adults with psychosis who are most at risk of future adverse cardiometabolic outcomes, such that the most intensive interventions can be directed in an informed way to attenuate the risk or even prevent those adverse outcomes from occurring.In this talk, Ben will first outline some recent advances in our understanding of the association between cardiometabolic and schizophrenia spectrum disorders. He will then introduce the field of cardiometabolic risk prediction, and highlight how existing tools developed for older general population adults are unlikely to be suitable for young people with psychosis. Finally, he will discuss the current state of play and the future of the Psychosis Metabolic Risk Calculator (PsyMetRiC), a novel clinically useful cardiometabolic risk prediction algorithm tailored for young people with psychosis, which has been developed and externally validated using data from three psychosis early intervention services in the UK.
Western diet administration in aged mice results in sex-dependent cognitive and metabolic dysfunction: Preventive role of rosmarinic acid
FENS Forum 2024
metabolic dysfunction coverage
7 items
Add content
Have a seminar, talk, or paper on metabolic dysfunction? Post it so others working in this area can find it.
Post content