ACBP/DBI neutralization for the experimental treatment of fatty liver disease

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Motiño, Omar | Lambertucci, Flavia | Joseph, Adrien | Durand, Sylvère | Anagnostopoulos, Gerasimos | Li, Sijing | Carbonnier, Vincent | Nogueira-Recalde, Uxía | Montégut, Léa | Chen, Hui | Aprahamian, Fanny | Nirmalathasan, Nitharsshini | Maiuri, Maria Chiara | Pietrocola, Federico | Valla, Dominique | Laouénan, Cédric | Gautier, Jean-François | Castera, Laurent | Vallet-Pichard, Anaïs | Vidal-Trécan, Tiphaine | Manchon, Pauline | Paradis, Valérie | Roulot, Dominique | Boitard, Christian | Terris, Benoit | Bihan, Hélène | Julla, Jean-Baptiste | Poynard, Thierry | Bzrustowski, Angélique | Larger, Etienne | Czernichow, Sébastien | Pol, Stanislas | Bedossa, Pierre | Junot, Christophe | de Preville, Nathalie | Zaleski, Isabelle Durand | Rautou, Pierre-Emmanuel | van Beers, Bernard | Dioguardi, Marco | Vilgrain, Valérie | Correas, Jean-Marie | Garteiser, Philippe | Riveline, Jean-Pierre | Ibberson, Mark | Martins, Isabelle | Kroemer, Guido

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. Abstract Acyl-CoA binding protein (ACBP), also known as diazepam-binding inhibitor (DBI), is an extracellular checkpoint of autophagy. Here, we report that patients with histologically confirmed metabolic-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) or liver fibrosis exhibit elevated levels of circulating ACBP/DBI protein as compared to non-affected controls. Plasma ACBP/DBI strongly correlated with the NAFLD and FIB4 scores in patients, and these correlations were independent of age and body mass index. We studied the capacity of a monoclonal antibody (mAb) neutralizing mouse ACBP/DBI to combat active liver disease in several mouse models, in which steatohepatitis had been induced by four different protocols, namely, (i) methionine/choline-deficient diet, (ii) Western style diet (WD) alone, (iii) WD combined with the hepatotoxic agent CCl 4 , and (iv) a combination of CCl 4 injections and oral ethanol challenge. Injections of anti-ACBP/DBI mAb attenuated histological, enzymological, metabolomic and transcriptomic signs of liver damage in these four models, hence halting or reducing the progression of non-alcoholic and alcoholic liver disease. Steatosis, inflammation, ballooning and fibrosis responded to ACBP/DBI inhibition at the preclinical level. Altogether, these findings support a causal role of ACBP/DBI in MASH and liver fibrosis, as well as the possibility to therapeutically target ACBP/DBI.

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