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Glutamate Signaling in Hepatic Stellate Cells Drives Alcoholic Steatosis

Authors
Choi, Won-MookKim, Hee-HoonKim, Myung-HoCinar, ResatYi, Hyon-SeungEun, Hyuk SooKim, Seok-HwanChoi, Young JaeLee, Young-SunKim, So YeonSeo, WonhyoLee, Jun-HeeShim, Young-RiKim, Ye EunYang, KeungmoRyu, TomHwang, Jung HwanLee, Chul-HoChoi, Hueng-SikGao, BinKim, WonKim, Sang KyumKunos, GeorgeJeong, Won-Il
Issue Date
5-Nov-2019
Publisher
CELL PRESS
Keywords
2-arachidonoylglycerol; alcoholic liver disease; cannabinoid receptor; metabotrophic glutamate receptor 5; Nrf2; transsulfuration pathway; xCT
Citation
CELL METABOLISM, v.30, no.5, pp.877 - +
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
CELL METABOLISM
Volume
30
Number
5
Start Page
877
End Page
+
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/61927
DOI
10.1016/j.cmet.2019.08.001
ISSN
1550-4131
Abstract
Activation of hepatocyte cannabinoid receptor-1 (CB1R) by hepatic stellate cell (HSC)-derived 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG) drives de novo lipogenesis in alcoholic liver disease (ALD). How alcohol stimulates 2-AG production in HSCs is unknown. Here, we report that chronic alcohol consumption induced hepatic cysteine deficiency and subsequent glutathione depletion by impaired transsulfuration pathway. A compensatory increase in hepatic cystine-glutamate anti-porter xCT boosted extracellular glutamate levels coupled to cystine uptake both in mice and in patients with ALD. Alcohol also induced the selective expression of metabotropic glutamate receptor-5 (mGluR5) in HSCs where mGluR5 activation stimulated 2-AG production. Consistently, genetic or pharmacologic inhibition of mGluR5 or xCT attenuated alcoholic steatosis in mice via the suppression of 2-AG production and subsequent CB1R-mediated de novo lipogenesis. We conclude that a bidirectional signaling operates at a metabolic synapse between hepatocytes and HSCs through xCT-mediated glutamate-mGluR5 signaling to produce 2-AG, which induces CB1R-mediated alcoholic steatosis.
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