Butyrate limits inflammatory macrophage niche in NASH.
Ankita SarkarPriya MitraAbhishake LahiriTanusree DasJit SarkarSandip PaulPartha ChakrabartiPublished in: Cell death & disease (2023)
Immune cell infiltrations with lobular inflammation in the background of steatosis and deregulated gut-liver axis are the cardinal features of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). An array of gut microbiota-derived metabolites including short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) multifariously modulates NASH pathogenesis. However, the molecular basis for the favorable impact of sodium butyrate (NaBu), a gut microbiota-derived SCFA, on the immunometabolic homeostasis in NASH remains elusive. We show that NaBu imparts a robust anti-inflammatory effect in lipopolysaccharide (LPS) stimulated or classically activated M1 polarized macrophages and in the diet-induced murine NASH model. Moreover, it impedes monocyte-derived inflammatory macrophage recruitment in liver parenchyma and induces apoptosis of proinflammatory liver macrophages (LM) in NASH livers. Mechanistically, by histone deactylase (HDAC) inhibition NaBu enhanced acetylation of canonical NF-κB subunit p65 along with its differential recruitment to the proinflammatory gene promoters independent of its nuclear translocation. NaBu-treated macrophages thus exhibit transcriptomic signatures that corroborate with a M2-like prohealing phenotype. NaBu quelled LPS-mediated catabolism and phagocytosis of macrophages, exhibited a differential secretome which consequently resulted in skewing toward prohealing phenotype and induced death of proinflammatory macrophages to abrogate metaflammation in vitro and in vivo. Thus NaBu could be a potential therapeutic as well as preventive agent in mitigating NASH.
Keyphrases
- anti inflammatory
- oxidative stress
- inflammatory response
- adipose tissue
- fatty acid
- insulin resistance
- lps induced
- high throughput
- endothelial cells
- ms ms
- genome wide
- transcription factor
- toll like receptor
- diabetic rats
- metabolic syndrome
- immune response
- dendritic cells
- high glucose
- single cell
- cell proliferation
- protein kinase
- rna seq