Divergent roles of RIPK3 and MLKL in high-fat diet-induced obesity and MAFLD in mice.
Hazel Tye; Stephanie A Conos; Tirta M Djajawi; Timothy A Gottschalk; Nasteho Abdoulkader; Isabella Y Kong; Helene L Kammoun; Vinod K Narayana; Tobias Kratina; Mary Speir; Jack Emery; Daniel S Simpson; Cathrine Hall; Angelina J Vince; Sophia Russo; Rhiannan Crawley; Maryam Rashidi; Joanne M Hildebrand; James M Murphy; Lachlan Whitehead; David P De Souza; Seth L Masters; Andre L Samson; Najoua Lalaoui; Edwin D Hawkins; Andrew J Murphy; James E Vince; Kate E Lawlor
Abstract
Cell death frequently occurs in the pathogenesis of obesity and metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD). However, the exact contribution of core cell death machinery to disease manifestations remains ill-defined. Here, we show via the direct comparison of mice genetically deficient in the essential necroptotic regulators, receptor-interacting protein kinase-3 (RIPK3) and mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL), as well as mice lacking apoptotic caspase-8 in myeloid cells combined with RIPK3 loss, that RIPK3/caspase-8 signaling regulates macrophage inflammatory responses and drives adipose tissue inflammation and MAFLD upon high-fat diet feeding. In contrast, MLKL, divergent to RIPK3, contributes to both obesity and MAFLD in a manner largely independent of inflammation. We also uncover that MLKL regulates the expression of molecules involved in lipid uptake, transport, and metabolism, and congruent with this, we discover a shift in the hepatic lipidome upon MLKL deletion. Collectively, these findings highlight MLKL as an attractive therapeutic target to combat the growing obesity pandemic and metabolic disease.
Journal | LIFE SCIENCE ALLIANCE |
ISSN | 2575-1077 |
Published | 01 Jan 2025 |
Volume | 8 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | |
DOI | 10.26508/lsa.202302446 |
Type | Journal Article |
Sponsorship |