Abstract

Affecting one third of the global population, with no pharmacotherapy available, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has become the leading cause of chronic liver disease. Surprisingly, the major cause of death in patients with NAFLD, particularly in those with the more severe nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), is atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (CVD). Thus, there is a critical need to identify targetable pathways for concurrent treatment of NASH and atherosclerotic CVD, which has been hampered by limited understanding of the pathophysiology and metabolic pathways linking these two diseases. Recently, we and others uncovered oxalate metabolism commonly dysregulated in NAFLD and CVD. Using unbiased transcriptomics, we identified suppression of genes that limit oxalate production in livers from humans and mice with NASH. Alanine-glyoxylate aminotransferase (AGXT), a liver-specific enzyme that detoxifies glyoxylate, the oxalate precursor, was reduced and oxalate was markedly increased in correlation with NASH severity. Remarkably, oxalate was also increased both in patients and mice with atherosclerosis. In our mouse models of hepatic oxalate overproduction ( Agxt -/- and Agxt -/- / Apoe -/- ), both NASH and atherosclerosis were increased with suppressed hepatic fatty acid β-oxidation (FAO) and induction of proinflammatory pathways. In hepatocytes, oxalate induced mitochondrial dysfunction and lipid accumulation while downregulating peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α (PPARα), inhibiting FAO and upregulating C-C motif chemokine ligand 5 (CCL5). Importantly, limiting hepatic oxalate production via hepatocyte-specific overexpression of AGXT (AAV8-TBG-AGXT) reduced NASH and atherosclerosis in mice by stimulating FAO and attenuating proinflammatory responses. Together, our findings uncover hepatic oxalate overproduction as a dysregulated metabolic pathway linking NASH and atherosclerotic CVD, highlighting the potential of oxalate reduction for concurrent treatment of these two prominent diseases.

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