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- 2012 AIChE Annual Meeting
- Food, Pharmaceutical & Bioengineering Division
- Intracellular Processes II
- (760f) Calcium Stimulated Metabolism Promotes Oxidative Stress in Hepatic Lipotoxicity
To identify mechanisms of palmitate lipotoxicity in hepatic cells, H4IIEC3 cells were treated with free fatty acids in combination with interventions intended to block specific events leading to palmitate-induced metabolic dysfunction and apoptosis. These experiments indicate that palmitate lipoapoptosis is marked by increased oxygen consumption and accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Supplementing culture media with the antioxidant N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC) reduced caspase activation and partially restored cell viability, suggesting that ROS accumulation is a critical factor necessary for activating lipoapoptosis. However, NAC did not normalize oxygen uptake rates of palmitate-treated cells, indicating that elevated ROS are not required for palmitate-induced alterations to oxidative metabolism. On the other hand, addition of the mitochondrial antagonist phenformin to palmitate-treated cells eliminated abnormal ROS accumulation, prevented the appearance of apoptotic markers, and normalized oxygen consumption rate. Taken together, these results indicate that palmitate-induced deregulation of mitochondrial metabolism is the primary cause of ROS accumulation and apoptosis in H4IIEC3 cells. Furthermore, chelation of intracellular calcium using BAPTA-AM attenuated ROS accumulation, oxygen consumption, caspase activation, and cell death in palmitate-treated cells. Based on these results, we propose a novel mechanism of palmitate lipotoxicity that is dependent on calcium-stimulated overactivation of oxidative mitochondrial metabolism, which promotes ROS accumulation and apoptosis.
Our presentation will discuss our experiments using modulators of calcium trafficking (BAPTA) and mitochondrial function (Phenformin, Rotenone) which alter ROS production and demonstrate a clear role for calcium activated mitochondrial metabolism in the context of palmitate lipotoxicity. Additionally, we will highlight how these alterations are promising targets in modulating NAFLD and lipoapoptosis.