Sexual dimorphism, hepatic mitochondrial adaptations, and hepatic steatosis

NIH RePORTER · VA · I01 · · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary/Abstract Hepatic steatosis (fatty liver) is a risk factor for type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and further liver injury, all major health issues for Veterans. Currently there are 1.6 million women Veterans, a number predicted to grow steadily making women's health issues a major concern going forward. Prior to menopause, women are protected against steatosis, but risk dramatically increases after loss of ovarian function and accumulating evidence shows that differences in estrogen signaling are a primary mediator. Physical inactivity and low fitness also drive increased risk for hepatic steatosis and associated pathologies. In contrast, increased physical activity and exercise protects and treats steatosis, even in obese patients. Abnormalities in hepatic mitochondrial function strongly contribute to the pathology of steatosis and are likely a primary target for the effects of physical activity and exercise to mitigate the condition, but mechanisms remain largely unknown. Estrogen is likely the cause of protection against hepatic steatosis in female rodents but the direct effects of estrogen signaling on hepatic mitochondria function have received little attention. Our recent findings show that female mice display increased mitochondrial respiration, lower reactive oxygen species (H2O2) emission and protection against steatosis in a sedentary condition compared to males. Female hepatic mitochondria respiratory capacity was also more responsive to diet- and exercise-induced metabolic stress, but these adaptive traits were partially diminished in mice with genetic ablation of mitochondrial turnover (biogenesis and mitophagy). These data form our hypothesis that enhanced mitochondrial function in females is critical for their inherent protection against steatosis and adaptive responses to metabolic stress. We will test the hypothesis that estrogen signaling through estrogen receptor α (ERα) is obligatory for elevated hepatic mitochondrial function and adaptability in females by driving enhanced mitochondrial biogenesis and mitophagy. A second objective of this proposal will test if differences in bile acid (BA) metabolism provide protection against steatosis in females. Female rodents display chronically higher serum and fecal BA levels, paired with higher expression of hepatic genes controlling cholesterol/BA synthesis. Increasing rates of BA synthesis and fecal excretion via BA sequestrant drugs and chronic CYP7a1 overexpression also prevent and treat hepatic steatosis, suggesting a similar affect to what we see in female livers. Our preliminary data suggest that estrogen and exercise synergize to increase BA synthesis and fecal excretion only in females. We will test the hypothesis that trafficking of excess acetyl CoA away from de novo lipogenesis (synthesis of new fatty acids) and towards BA synthesis and fecal loss during postprandial conditions is an additional mechanism that protects females against hepatic steatosis....

Key facts

NIH application ID
10292445
Project number
5I01BX002567-07
Recipient
KANSAS CITY VA MEDICAL CENTER
Principal Investigator
John P Thyfault
Activity code
I01
Funding institute
VA
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
Award type
5
Project period
2014-10-01 → 2023-09-30