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