Autophagy alleviates amiodarone-induced hepatotoxicity.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
October 2020
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Wandrer, Franziska | |
Liebig, Stephanie | |
John, Katharina | |
Vondran, Florian | |
Wedemeyer, Heiner | |
Veltmann, Christian | |
Pfeffer, Tobias J | |
Shibolet, Oren | |
Schulze-Osthoff, Klaus | |
Simon, Hans-Uwe | |
Bantel, Heike |
Subject(s)
Series
Archives of toxicology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0340-5761
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
32651653
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
Amiodarone is a widely used antiarrhythmic drug that can cause the development of steatohepatitis as well as liver fibrosis and cirrhosis. The molecular mechanisms of amiodarone-mediated liver injury remain largely unknown. We therefore analyzed amiodarone-mediated hepatocellular injury in patients with chronic heart failure, in primary hepatocytes and HepG2 cells. We found that amiodarone-treated patients with chronic heart failure revealed significantly higher serum levels of caspase-cleaved keratin-18, an apoptosis biomarker, compared to healthy individuals or patients not receiving amiodarone. Furthermore, amiodarone treatment of hepatocytes resulted in apoptosis associated with lipid accumulation and ER-stress induction. Liver cell steatosis was accompanied by enhanced de novo lipogenesis which, after reaching peak levels, declined together with decreased activation of ER stress. The decline of amiodarone-mediated lipotoxicity was associated with protective autophagy induction. In contrast, in hepatocytes treated with the autophagy inhibitor chloroquine as well as in autophagy gene (ATG5 or ATG7)-deficient hepatocytes, amiodarone-triggered toxicity was increased. In conclusion, we demonstrate that amiodarone induces lipid accumulation associated with ER stress and apoptosis in hepatocytes, which is mirrored by increased keratin-18 fragment serum levels in amiodarone-treated patients. Autophagy reduces amiodarone-mediated lipotoxicity and could provide a therapeutic strategy for protection from drug-induced liver injury.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 204_2020_Article_2837.pdf | Adobe PDF | 1.19 MB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | published |