- Browse by Author
Browsing by Author "Culver, Alexander"
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Activin B promotes the initiation and progression of liver fibrosis(Wolters Kluwer, 2022) Wang, Yan; Hamang, Matthew; Culver, Alexander; Jiang, Huaizhou; Yanum, Jennifer; Garcia, Veronica; Lee, Joonyong; White, Emily; Kusumanchi, Praveen; Chalasani, Naga; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Yaden, Benjamin C.; Dai, Guoli; Biology, School of ScienceThe role of activin B, a transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) superfamily cytokine, in liver health and disease is largely unknown. We aimed to investigate whether activin B modulates liver fibrogenesis. Liver and serum activin B, along with its analog activin A, were analyzed in patients with liver fibrosis from different etiologies and in mouse acute and chronic liver injury models. Activin B, activin A, or both was immunologically neutralized in mice with progressive or established carbon tetrachloride (CCl4 )-induced liver fibrosis. Hepatic and circulating activin B was increased in human patients with liver fibrosis caused by several liver diseases. In mice, hepatic and circulating activin B exhibited persistent elevation following the onset of several types of liver injury, whereas activin A displayed transient increases. The results revealed a close correlation of activin B with liver injury regardless of etiology and species. Injured hepatocytes produced excessive activin B. Neutralizing activin B largely prevented, as well as improved, CCl4 -induced liver fibrosis, which was augmented by co-neutralizing activin A. Mechanistically, activin B mediated the activation of c-Jun-N-terminal kinase (JNK), the induction of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression, and the maintenance of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1) expression in injured livers. Moreover, activin B directly induced a profibrotic expression profile in hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) and stimulated these cells to form a septa structure. Conclusions: We demonstrate that activin B, cooperating with activin A, mediates the activation or expression of JNK, iNOS, and PARP1 and the activation of HSCs, driving the initiation and progression of liver fibrosis.Item GDF8 Contributes to Liver Fibrogenesis and Concomitant Skeletal Muscle Wasting(MDPI, 2023-07-06) Culver, Alexander; Hamang, Matthew; Wang, Yan; Jiang, Huaizhou; Yanum, Jennifer; White, Emily; Gawrieh, Samer; Vuppalanchi, Raj K.; Chalasani, Naga P.; Dai, Guoli; Yaden, Benjamin C.; Biology, School of SciencePatients with end-stage liver disease exhibit progressive skeletal muscle atrophy, highlighting a negative crosstalk between the injured liver and muscle. Our study was to determine whether TGFβ ligands function as the mediators. Acute or chronic liver injury was induced by a single or repeated administration of carbon tetrachloride. Skeletal muscle injury and repair was induced by intramuscular injection of cardiotoxin. Activin type IIB receptor (ActRIIB) ligands and growth differentiation factor 8 (Gdf8) were neutralized with ActRIIB-Fc fusion protein and a Gdf8-specific antibody, respectively. We found that acute hepatic injury induced rapid and adverse responses in muscle, which was blunted by neutralizing ActRIIB ligands. Chronic liver injury caused muscle atrophy and repair defects, which were prevented or reversed by inactivating ActRIIB ligands. Furthermore, we found that pericentral hepatocytes produce excessive Gdf8 in injured mouse liver and cirrhotic human liver. Specific inactivation of Gdf8 prevented liver injury-induced muscle atrophy, similar to neutralization of ActRIIB ligands. Inhibition of Gdf8 also reversed muscle atrophy in a treatment paradigm following chronic liver injury. Direct injection of exogenous Gdf8 protein into muscle along with acute focal muscle injury recapitulated similar dysregulated muscle regeneration as that observed with liver injury. The results indicate that injured liver negatively communicate with the muscle largely via Gdf8. Unexpectedly, inactivation of Gdf8 simultaneously ameliorated liver fibrosis in mice following chronic liver injury. In vitro, Gdf8 induced human hepatic stellate (LX-2) cells to form a septa-like structure and stimulated expression of profibrotic factors. Our findings identified Gdf8 as a novel hepatomyokine contributing to injured liver-muscle negative crosstalk along with liver injury progression.Item TGF-beta signaling in an in vivo model of NASH(2016) Culver, Alexander; Dai, Guoli; Yaden, Benjamin; Marrs, JamesA burgeoning area of focus within liver disease research is centered on the concomitant muscle atrophy present in end stage liver disease patients which shows a correlation to severity of hepatic fibrosis and transplant survival outcomes. Of particular interest, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is a form of liver disease that is characterized as the hepatic manifestation of metabolic syndrome. If left untreated, the disease can progress to the state of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma requiring transplant. Concordant with increasing global prevalence of obesity, NASH is projected to become the leading cause for liver transplants by 2020. Due to a lack of therapeutic options, these patients represent a large unmet medical need in the western world. A major hurdle to therapeutic research is the lack of a quick, reproducible, and cost effective in vivo model that recapitulates the plethora of pathologies and their molecular underpinnings manifested by this disorder. Our studies attempted to validate and expand upon a two-hit model of NASH, which incorporated both the integral comorbidities associated with metabolic challenges of obesity along with liver injury. The two-hit model manifests not only the hepatic morphohistological characteristics of the disease, but also incorporates the obligatory muscle atrophy. To further elaborate on the potential direct link between liver and skeletal muscle and remove any confounding issues associated with the model, in vitro administration of hepatotoxins representing various pathologies associated with liver disease, were used to recapitulate the liver-muscle endocrine signaling that exists in vivo. Our data shows that a variety of hepatoxins can elicit hepatocellular damage which releases factors that inhibits myotube size in vitro. The two hit model also preserves many of conserved molecular underpinnings observed in clinical hepatic fibrosis. Of particular interest, the TGFβ superfamily has been demonstrated to play an important regulatory role in the progression of fibrosis in NASH patients. TGFβ, Activin A, and Follistatin are members of the highly conserved family that are increased in NASH patients. Furthermore, these proteins have a well-studied role in muscle health, regeneration, and mass that has been hypothesized to be conserved between liver and muscle tissues. Surprisingly, novel expression of the myokine and negative regulator of muscle mass Gdf8 (myostatin) was increased in our in vivo model as well. Our studies focused on the molecular interactions of these TGFβ superfamily members and their role on liver disease progression. Through specific inhibition of these proteins (Activin A and Gdf8), we demonstrated that they appear to play key individual roles in the progression of the concomitant muscle atrophy observed in NASH patients. Interestingly, superior efficacy was gained with the treatment of a pan inhibitor of these proteins (Activin A, B, Gdf8 etc.) via a soluble decoy receptor (ActRIIB-Fc), suggesting an additional unaccounted for ligand. Activin B, was found to be increased in two separate in vivo models of liver fibrosis (two-hit model and BDL), has been implicated in regulating muscle mass. Our data suggest a pivotal role for several members of the TGFβ superfamily in NASH associated muscle atrophy. Therapies designed to treat liver fibrosis and the resultant decrements in muscle mass and force must account for these agents which will require pan inhibition of TGFβ superfamily ligands that signal through the ActRIIB receptor.