If you don't remember your password, you can reset it by entering your email address and clicking the Reset Password button. You will then receive an email that contains a secure link for resetting your password
If the address matches a valid account an email will be sent to __email__ with instructions for resetting your password
Centre for Liver and Gastroenterology Research and National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
Centre for Liver and Gastroenterology Research and National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
Centre for Liver and Gastroenterology Research and National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
Centre for Liver and Gastroenterology Research and National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UKToronto Centre for Liver Disease, University of Toronto, Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Canada
Corresponding author. Address: Centre for Liver and Gastroenterology Research and National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK. Tel.: +44 121 4146967.
Centre for Liver and Gastroenterology Research and National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
Mice deficient in ketohexokinase (KHK) show reduced features of NASH on a high-fat/high-fructose diet.
•
KHK inhibition reduces lipogenic gene expression in the presence of high fructose/glucose.
•
Activated myofibroblasts show reduced expression of fibrogenic genes when treated with KHK inhibitor.
•
KHK inhibitor reduced hepatic accumulation of lipogenic fructose derivatives and glycolysis in human liver.
Background & Aims
Increasing evidence highlights dietary fructose as a major driver of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) pathogenesis, the majority of which is cleared on first pass through the hepatic circulation by enzymatic phosphorylation to fructose-1-phosphate via the ketohexokinase (KHK) enzyme. Without a current approved therapy, disease management emphasises lifestyle interventions, but few patients adhere to such strategies. New targeted therapies are urgently required.
Methods
We have used a unique combination of human liver specimens, a murine dietary model of NAFLD and human multicellular co-culture systems to understand the hepatocellular consequences of fructose administration. We have also performed a detailed nuclear magnetic resonance-based metabolic tracing of the fate of isotopically labelled fructose upon administration to the human liver.
Results
Expression of KHK isoforms is found in multiple human hepatic cell types, although hepatocyte expression predominates. KHK knockout mice show a reduction in serum transaminase, reduced steatosis and altered fibrogenic response on an Amylin diet. Human co-cultures exposed to fructose exhibit steatosis and activation of lipogenic and fibrogenic gene expression, which were reduced by pharmacological inhibition of KHK activity. Analysis of human livers exposed to 13C-labelled fructose confirmed that steatosis, and associated effects, resulted from the accumulation of lipogenic precursors (such as glycerol) and enhanced glycolytic activity. All of these were dose-dependently reduced by administration of a KHK inhibitor.
Conclusions
We have provided preclinical evidence using human livers to support the use of KHK inhibition to improve steatosis, fibrosis, and inflammation in the context of NAFLD.
Lay summary
We have used a mouse model, human cells, and liver tissue to test how exposure to fructose can cause the liver to store excess fat and become damaged and scarred. We have then inhibited a key enzyme within the liver that is responsible for fructose metabolism. Our findings show that inhibition of fructose metabolism reduces liver injury and fibrosis in mouse and human livers and thus this may represent a potential route for treating patients with fatty liver disease in the future.
The disease spectrum encompasses simple steatosis to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and cirrhosis. Patients with NAFLD have high mortality and are at an increased risk of suffering adverse cardiovascular events.
Given the prevalence, limited treatment options, and cost of screening, new treatments are urgently required. Novel therapeutic candidates must manage the complexity of steatosis, systemic metabolic disturbance, inflammation, and fibrosis to be of benefit to patients. Current treatments begin with lifestyle interventions designed to facilitate weight loss,
Fructose metabolism bypasses the requirement for phosphofructokinase and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, which are rate-limiting for glycolysis and gluconeogenesis. Thus, fructose drives hepatic fatty acid synthesis and de novo lipogenesis (DNL) via pyruvate and acetyl-CoA formation. Activation of key transcription factors such as SREBP1c
meaning activity of KHK predominates. The two KHK isoforms a and c vary in expression. KHKc has a higher affinity for fructose, and exposure to fructose increases the hepatic expression of both isoforms.
Thus, in the context of Western diet consumption, conditions favour maximal hepatic exposure to fructose and the potential for unchecked promotion of DNL.
Importantly, little is known about the hepatic response to fructose in subjects with NAFLD
with a paucity of mouse and particularly human data describing the physiological consequences of fructokinase inhibition. The evidence above provides a basis to consider inhibition of KHK as a potential therapy in NAFLD. Targeting steatosis and NASH by interference with KHK function should reduce lipogenesis, free fatty acid, and triglyceride (TG) generation.
Here, we report unique studies testing whether pharmacological inhibition of KHK alters the outcome of fructose administration.
Materials and methods
Human tissue
Tissue was collected at the Liver and Hepatobiliary Unit, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, UK, with prior informed patient consent and research ethics committee approval (06/Q702/61). Normal tissue was surplus to requirement for transplantation, whereas diseased tissue was collected from explanted cirrhotic livers (primary biliary cholangitis [PBC], alcohol-related cirrhosis [ALD], and NASH). Matched clinical data are summarised in Table 1.
Table 1Demographic information for the transplant tissue donors used in this investigation.
Aetiology
Age (years)
BMI (kg/m2)
IGF/diabetes (Y/N)
AST (IU/L)
ALT (IU/L)
Platelets (109/L)
Albumin (g/L)
FIB4
APRI
Mean KHK
NASH
51
–
Yes
37
24
87
35
2.3129
0.69
2.972
NASH
62
–
Yes
57
36
120
26
2.4636
0.75
0.6356
NASH
75
–
Yes
–
65
133
32
–
1.22
0.7882
NASH
48
43.86
Yes
16
27
204
45
1.5882
0.33
3.14
NASH
59
34.81
No
–
787
58
26
–
33.92
1.325
NASH
55
22
Yes
–
254
70
27
–
9.07
1.225
NASH
59
34.42
No
–
818
64
28
–
31.95
2.569
NASH
68
24.74
Yes
–
1491
122
33
–
30.55
2.318
NASH
63
34.65
Yes
9
15
167
32
1.8862
0.22
0.7227
NASH
68
28.03
Yes
–
541
86
20
–
15.73
2.381
NASH PBC
72
24.92
No
–
1233
112
30
–
27.52
1.382
ALD
58
23.01
No
50
–
84
38
–
1.49
0.1988
ALD
60
34.03
No
16
–
100
45
–
0.4
0.2212
ALD
59
23.27
No
28
–
96
40
–
0.73
0.243
ALD
52
28.35
No
33
–
142
48
–
0.58
0.1922
PSC
61
–
No
66
24
57
26
–
2.89
1.335
PSC
66
24.72
No
–
48
132
36
–
–
1.626
PSC
37
21.73
No
–
1627
199
31
–
–
3.879
PSC
51
29.81
Yes
–
857
126
20
–
–
1.038
PSC
22
20.72
No
–
1595
402
24
–
–
1.927
PBC
54
23.52
No
–
105
78
35
–
–
1.194
PBC
46
–
No
–
1331
92
19
–
–
0.539
NASH PBC
72
24.92
No
–
1233
112
30
–
–
1.511
PBC
71
26.47
No
64
62
95
21
–
0.68
2.563
All details are anonymised data that were available to the researchers from patients where samples were collected at the time of transplant. Matching tissue from each patient was collected for use in experimental analyses. The dash denotes no clinical data available for the indicated variable. Diagnosis at time of transplant (aetiology) and for each tissue sample total KHK mRNA expression in whole liver is given (determined by qPCR, see Materials and methods section). Data represent individual expression values compared with the SRSF4 housekeeping gene. Units for other values are given in the column headings.
CXC chemokine ligand 16 promotes integrin-mediated adhesion of liver-infiltrating lymphocytes to cholangiocytes and hepatocytes within the inflamed human liver.
For additional information see Supplementary information, Methods. Cells were treated with media alone or media plus indicated concentrations (from 30 nM to 3 μM) of ketohexokinase inhibitor. The KHK inhibitor PF-06835919 used in these studies was prepared as previously described (WO2017115205A1). Media effluent or cells were collected on days 5, 7, and 10 for analysis of lipid (Nile red stain or TG quantitation), gene expression, and immunofluorescent analysis as previously described.
Determination of effects of KHK inhibition on LX-2 cells
LX-2 cells (S. Friedman, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA) were seeded in 24-well plates in DMEM +2% bovine serum albumin. At confluency, wells were scratched and media was replaced with fresh media containing DMSO or 10 μM KHKi (PF-06835919), ± transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGFb1) (10 ng/ml) or platelet-derived growth factor-BB (PDGF-BB, 100 ng/ml, Miltenyi Biotec, Woking, UK). Real-time images were captured over a 24-h period in a 5% CO2 environment at 37°C using a Cell-IQ system (CM Technologies, Oy, Finland) running Imagen software version 2.8.12.0 and analyser version 3.3.0. The percentage closure was determined as previously described.
For gene expression analysis, total RNA was prepared from murine and human liver specimens, LX-2 cells, or cells isolated from the HemoShear culture system. Information is supplied in the Supplementary information, Methods.
Western blotting
Human liver tissue prepared and separated on a 10% SDS polyacrylamide gel using standard protocols. Membranes were immunoblotted primary antibodies: KHK, KHKA, KHKC (Signalway Antibody, MA, USA) or β-actin followed by horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibody diluted in PBS/5% milk/0.1% Tween 20. Detection of the bound antibody was performed using enhanced chemiluminescence Western blotting substrate (ThermoFisher Scientific, Loughborough, UK), and ImageJ software version 1.70_75.
Murine model of NAFLD
Nine-week-old wild-type (WT) and KHK-deficient (Ketohexokinase A and C knockout [KHK-A/C KO], Takeda) litter-mate male C57/BL6 mice were fed high trans-fat/fructose and cholesterol diet (Amylin
with no significant phenotypic consequence. Blood and tissue samples were collected at 37 and 38 weeks, respectively. Plasma transaminase content was assessed using a 7180 Clinical Analyzer (Hitachi High-Technologies, Tokyo, Japan), and TIMP-1 concentration by ELISA (Mouse TIMP-1 Quantikine ELISA kit, R&D systems, Abingdon, UK). Frozen liver tissue was used for assessment of total TG (E-test Wako; FUJIFILM Wako Pure Chemical Corporation) and collagen concentration (Total Collagen Assay Kit, QuickZyme Biosciences, Leiden, The Netherlands). Urine was used to determine glucose and creatinine concentration using a 7180 Clinical Analyzer. Urinary fructose concentration was detected using EnzyChromTM Fructose assay kit (Biochain, San Fransisco, USA). All animal experiments were designed and reported under best practice guidelines from ARRIVE and approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of Shonan Research Center, Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited.
Immunohistochemical and chromogenic staining of human liver tissue
Sections (7 μm thick) of formalin-fixed or snap frozen human or murine liver tissue were stained with H&E or Sirius Red
according to standard protocols. For analysis of transporter expression fixed tissue sections were stained using standard indirect immunohistochemical methods as described previously.
Assessment of human liver metabolism by nuclear magnetic resonance
Large superficial vessels in the exposed cut face of freshly cut wedges from donor or human liver specimens from patients with cirrhosis were cannulated to permit media perfusion. Samples were flushed with glucose-free DMEM (Thermofisher) and paired liver samples were then perfused with media alone or KHK inhibitor (10 μM, in glucose-free DMEM containing unlabelled fructose [Sigma, Gillingham, UK]) for 30 min. Subsequently, the wedges were perfused with glucose-free DMEM containing 13C6-labelled fructose (20 mM, Cortec Net SA, Paris, France) for up to 3 h. Tissue samples were collected at intervals from 30 min to 3 h and snap frozen or formalin fixed.
Human liver tissue sample extraction, data acquisition, and processing
Tissue samples from perfused livers (100 mg) were added to gentleMACs M-Tubes in cold methanol (8 μl/mg) and purified water (2 μl/mg). Tissue was homogenised (gentleMACs, Miltenyi, UK) and polar metabolites were extracted as described previously.
Samples were kept at 4°C before nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) imaging. All spectra were acquired at 300 K on a Bruker 600 MHz spectrometer with a TCI 1.7 mm z-PFG cryogenic probe using a cooled Bruker SampleJet autosampler as previously described.
One-dimensional 1H-NMR spectra were processed using the NMRlab and Metabolab programmes within Matlab, version R2016b (MathWorks, MA, USA). Two-dimensional heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) spectra processing was initially performed using NMRPipe
and subsequent analysis was performed using NMRLab in MATLAB_R2016b (The Mathworks). Cosine-squared window functions were applied to both dimensions and spectra were phased manually. Calibration was carried out manually using L-lactic acid as a reference peak (δ 1.31/22.9 ppm) and scaling was performed using TSA-scaling factors from 1D NOESY (Nuclear Overhauser Effect Spectroscopy) associated spectra. Peak identification used MetaboLab
with reference to HMDB (Human Metabolome Database : https://hmdb.ca).
Statistical analysis
Unless otherwise stated, p values were calculated using the Student t test with 2-way analysis of variance. Murine data were also analysed using 2-way ANOVA with the Tukey post-test to determine effects between groups. Data represent mean values with error bars indicating SEM. Individual symbols indicate a single animal within the group. For transplant patients for whom we had demographic information and explanted liver tissue, we performed Pearson correlation analysis. Here we compared the hepatic KHK mRNA level with standard haematological and biochemical biomarkers.
Results
Mice deficient in KHK show reduced injury and fibrogenesis
WT and KHK A/C-KO mice were fed normal chow or high-trans fat/fructose Amylin diet for 29 weeks. WT mice showed a significant increase in alanine transaminase (AST) and alanine transaminase (ALT) concentrations when exposed to a high-fat diet (Fig. 1A and B). ALT levels were markedly reduced in KO mice on a high-fat diet compared with WT (Fig. 1A). Mice on the Amylin diet also showed development of steatosis as evidenced by increased hepatic TG content (Fig. 1C, Fig. S1). This was accompanied by increased cholesterol levels, and a modest decrease in circulating TG content (Fig. S1B) as previously reported.
Early liver fibrosis was demonstrated by a significant increase in plasma TIMP-1 concentration, total hepatic collagen content, and histological fibrosis area (Fig. 1E and F, Fig. S1A). There was increased transcription of Collagen1a and TIMP-1 in response to diet, with significantly less induction in KHK-KO animals (Fig. 1G). Figure S1C shows that KHK A/C-deficient animals show a significant increase in urinary fructose on the Amylin diet. Thus, deficiency in KHK protects against features of NASH in this murine model.
Fig. 1KHK-deficient mice are protected from the effects of a Western diet.
(A–F) WT or KHK-KO mice fed Amylin diet or calorifically matched controls for 29 weeks. Values from 7–8 mice per group are shown with mean and SEM for each cohort. Unpaired t tests where ∗p <0.05, ∗∗p <0.001, and ∗∗∗p <0.0001, ∗∗∗∗p <0.00001. Two- way ANOVA with Tukey post test for ALT and total fibrosis area for WT and KHK-KO p = 0.002 and p = 0.0299, respectively. (G) qPCR data are mean ± SEM n = 7–8 mice per group. One-way ANOVA with Tukey post test for WT and KHK-KO mice on the high-fat diet (p = 0.002, p = 0.0001, p = 0.0016, and p = 0.0014 respectively). ALT, alanine transaminase; AST, aspartate transaminase; KHK, ketohexokinase; KO, knockout; TG, triglyceride; TIMP-1, Tissue Inhibitor of Matrix metalloproteinase-1; WT, wild-type.
Inhibition of KHK in human hepatic culture models reduces steatosis and profibrotic responses
Human hepatocellular expression of KHKa and c was confirmed by qPCR analysis (Fig. S2). Overall transcription of KHK mRNA was similar between normal and fibrotic livers (Fig. S2A). Preliminary correlation analysis of KHK expression and clinical parameters (Figs. S2B and S3 revealed no correlation between hepatic KHK mRNA and biochemical or haematological parameters). We also specifically stratified KHK expression in patients with NASH in the cirrhotic vs. fibrotic categories (based on the AST to Platelet Ratio Index [APRI], Fig. S3B) and again there was no correlation.
Expression of KHK was detected in primary human hepatocytes, with modest expression in other epithelial and fibroblast populations (Fig. S2A). This was supported by immunohistochemical staining with a pan KHK antibody (Fig. S2C). Staining was uniformly distributed across the lobule, but macrovesicular steatosis in donor samples led to a concentration of staining at the periphery of steatotic hepatocytes. Expression was concentrated in hepatocytes within regenerative nodules from cirrhotic NASH samples, but intensity of expression was similar between normal and fatty donor liver specimens. We interrogated an open access RNAseq database
to assess whether similar patterns of gene expression were evident in hepatic mesenchymal and epithelial populations from normal and cirrhotic livers. Figure S4 confirms that KHK was widely expressed in epithelial and mesenchymal cells in this study, with increased median gene expression in hepatocytes in an uninjured context. In contrast, myofibroblast expression appeared similar in both conditions.
report that KHKc is the major hepatic transporter under basal conditions. Western blotting showed a reduction in total expression of KHK in cirrhotic liver (ALD and NASH). KHKc was the most abundantly expressed isoform (Fig. S2D). We also confirmed that the major fructose transporters were expressed in the context of human liver disease (Fig. S5). Both GLUT2 and GLUT5 mRNA were present in normal and NASH livers, with modest reduction in simple steatosis. Immunohistochemical assessment of GLUT2 protein confirmed localisation to the sinusoidal face of hepatocytes in normal livers with redistribution to a more cytoplasmic localisation in NASH (Fig. S5).
where hepatocytes and non-parenchymal cells (NPCs) are co-cultured for 10 days under shear stress and can be treated to recreate either simple steatosis or more advanced NASH pathophysiology. TG accumulation within hepatocytes increased in the presence of glucose and fructose (Fig. 2A and B). Administration of increasing doses of KHK inhibitor to cells treated with both fructose and glucose resulted in dose-dependent inhibition of lipid accumulation (Fig. 2). Both total lipid and specific TG species were increased in cultured cells exposed to glucose and fructose. We also observed a change in hepatocyte lipogenic (ACLY, DGAT-2, FASN, and SREBP-1) and fibrogenic (Col1A1 and Col4A1) gene expression in NPCs (Fig. 2C). Inhibition of KHK in the presence of glucose and fructose led to a return of lipogenic gene expression to baseline levels (FASN, ACLY, and DGAT-2, Fig. 3). This was accompanied by a tendency to increase cytoprotective gene expression (HO-1, NQO-1, TXNRD1, and Nrf-2).
Fig. 2Fructose administration to human co-cultures results in triglyceride accumulation which is dose-dependently inhibited by KHK inhibition.
(A) Cells in low glucose and insulin (5.6 mM and 0.69 nM respectively, LGLI), or glucose/fructose (12.5 mM GF) ± 30 nM to 3 μM KHK inhibitor (PF-06835919). Nuclei (blue), hepatocytes (anti-E-Cadherin, green) Nile red (lipid). (B) Left panel, lipid quantification mean ± SEM, n = 5. Unpaired t tests LGLI vs. GF ∗∗p <0.01 and ∗∗∗p <0.001, KHK inhibitor, ∗∗p <0.01, ∗∗∗p <0.001 vs. GF. Remaining panels, triglyceride content by mass spectrometry (∗p <0.05, ∗∗p <0.01 vs. LGLI). (C) qPCR for cells in 25 mM glucose/fructose (25 mM) alone or 12.5 mM each. Expression vs. NONO/PGK1/RPS11 housekeeping genes mean ± SEM of N = 5. KHK, ketohexokinase; GF, glucose/fructose; LGLI, low glucose and insulin.
Taqman PCR assessment in co-cultured hepatocytes in low glucose and insulin (5.6 mM and 0.69 nM LGLI), or glucose/fructose (12.5 mM GF) ± 30 nM to 3 μM KHK inhibitor (PF-06835919) expression vs. NONO/PGK1/RPS11 housekeeping genes is mean ± SEM, n = 5 replicate experiments. Where indicated, there was a significant change in gene expression after inhibitor treatment vs. GF-treated cells (unpaired t tests ∗p <0.05, ∗∗p <0.001, and ∗∗∗p <0.0001). KHK, ketohexokinase; KHKi, KHK inhibited.
We also performed experiments using cultured fibroblast cells (LX-2) to assess whether KHK inhibition can have a direct effect on hepatic fibrosis. Figure 4 shows that administration of KHK inhibitor to LX-2 cells did not significantly alter their phenotypic appearance, viability (not shown), or ability to repair a scratch wound (inset images Fig. 3A). However, we noted a significant reduction in the ability of activated (PDGF exposed) cells to close a wound following treatment with KHK inhibitor. This was accompanied by a significantly reduced profibrogenic gene expression profile. Hence, Col1A1, aSMA, CTGF, PDGFRB, and LOX expression reduced in TGFB-stimulated cells exposed to KHK inhibitor.
(A) LX-2 cells serum starved (0.2% BSA) for 24 h before the scratch wound ± PDGF-BB and 10 μM KHKi (PF-06835919). Control cells ±100 ng/ml PDGF-BB alone. Data mean ± SEM % closure (left) and at 24 h (right). Images of unscratched wells at 24 h. Unpaired t tests ∗∗p <0.01 and ∗∗∗∗p <0.0001. (B) PCR gene expression in LX-2 ± TGFb1 (10 ng/ml) or KHKi (10 μM) for 24 h. Data mean ± SEM fold change in expression vs. control untreated cells. Significant change in gene expression (unpaired t tests ∗∗∗p <0.0001 and ∗∗∗∗p <0.00001). BSA, bovine serum albumin; KHK, ketohexokinase; KHKi, KHK inhibited; PDGF, platelet-derived growth factor; TGFb, transforming growth factor beta.
Human livers exhibit a rapid lipogenic response after fructose administration, which is modified by administration of KHK inhibitor
We used a perfusion system with viable human liver tissue wedges to confirm the mechanism by which KHK inhibition alters hepatic lipid accumulation (Figs. 5 and 6 and Fig. S6). Freshly harvested normal human liver tissue wedges were perfused with media containing 20 mM 13C6-labelled fructose in the presence or absence of 10 μM KHK inhibitor, and tissue samples were collected 30 min to 3 h later. Tissue integrity was confirmed at the start and end of the perfusion period by H&E staining (Fig. 5), and frozen tissue samples were processed for NMR metabolomic analysis. Comparison of the 1H-13C-HSQC spectra from representative control (blue) and KHK inhibited (red) liver samples after increasing perfusion time confirmed that labelled fructose was taken up by the control and inhibitor-treated livers at a similar rate and accumulated over time. Gradual conversion of fructose to glycerol and glycerate was observed in control livers, as was conversion to labelled sorbitol (Fig. 5). Although labelled sorbitol appeared in the KHK inhibited samples, there was a distinct lack of labelled glycerol and glycerate. Quantification of this response is shown in Fig. 6. This confirms that a single administration of KHK inhibitor reduced human hepatic accumulation of labelled lipogenic fructose derivatives. Glycolysis was also altered, as there was little accumulation of lactate (or alanine) after treatment with KHK inhibitor. As labelled fructose was no longer converted to these metabolites in the KHK-inhibited livers, there was a corresponding increase in labelled sorbitol (Fig. 6). We performed a similar analysis of explanted NASH tissue (Fig. S6) and the results were similar, except for a reduced accumulation of labelled carbon in glucose molecules and slower accumulation of labelled fructose in tissue. Thus, we show for the first time in normal and cirrhotic human liver tissue, that fructose uptake results in a rapid conversion to lipogenic precursor molecules. Inhibition of ketohexokinase enzyme activity halts this conversion, reducing TG accumulation, and cellular stress and causes a consequential reduction in fibrogenesis.
Fig. 5NMR analysis of perfused human livers exposed to stable isotope-labelled fructose confirms KHK inhibition reduces lipogenesis and glycolysis.
Superficial vessels in paired wedges were cannulated (image) to permit delivery of 13C-labelled fructose. Livers maintained at 20°C for up to 3 h with continuous media perfusion, with tissue samples collected at indicated times. Representative H&E stained samples at 3-hour time point (top centre/right images). Graphs represent 1H-13C-HSQC spectra from matched controls (CT: blue) and KHK inhibited (KHKi red) donor liver samples exposed to labelled fructose for indicated periods (30 min to 3 h). Peak assignments are indicated by hashed circles. CT, computed tomography; HSQC, heteronuclear single quantum coherence; KHK, ketohexokinase; KHKi, KHK inhibited; NMR, nuclear magnetic resonance.
Diagrammatic representation of the major fructose metabolism pathway overlaid with 1H-13C-HSQC spectrum integrated peak intensities for indicated metabolites in control (CT: green) or KHK-treated (KHKi: purple) livers over the experimental time course (30 min to 3 h). CT, computed tomography; HSQC, heteronuclear single quantum coherence; KHK, ketohexokinase; KHKi, KHK inhibited.
Consuming fructose-sweetened, not glucose-sweetened, beverages increases visceral adiposity and lipids and decreases insulin sensitivity in overweight/obese humans.
Consuming fructose-sweetened, not glucose-sweetened, beverages increases visceral adiposity and lipids and decreases insulin sensitivity in overweight/obese humans.
Rather, presence of abundant fuel for glycolysis and enhanced acetyl-CoA production promote DNL with accumulation of intermediates of glycolysis providing fuel for glycerol-3 phosphatase and TG synthesis.
However, the cellular consequences of administration of fructose on a background of liver disease have yet to be fully characterised, particularly in a human setting. It is also important to acknowledge that there is considerable inter-individual difference between effects of fructose administration in humans, and acute vs. chronic dietary administration may have different outcomes.
We have demonstrated that ketohexokinase is abundantly expressed in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes. Onset of metabolic liver disease in the form of steatosis or more significant NASH was not associated with changes in RNA expression, but total protein expression was reduced, probably reflecting the decreased proportion of hepatocytes in fibrotic livers. We also noted a modest increase in expression of the major fructose transporter GLUT-5 in NASH accompanied by redistribution of GLUT-2 to hepatocyte cytoplasm. Hyperinsulinaemia has been shown to drive enterocyte GLUT-2 redistribution,
and delivery to the liver via the portal vein where liver epithelial populations transport and metabolise the fructose.
We demonstrate that steatosis and serum transaminase elevation are evident in mice fed a high-fat diet supplemented with fructose. KHK-deficiency was protective, leading to a marked increase in urinary fructose excretion as expected.
Hepatic steatosis as a result of fructose overload occurs because unregulated glycolysis and gluconeogenesis drive fatty acid synthesis and DNL. Elevated levels of uric acid and increased transaminases correlate with increased fructose uptake,
Consumption of fructose- but not glucose-sweetened beverages for 10 weeks increases circulating concentrations of uric acid, retinol binding protein-4, and gamma-glutamyl transferase activity in overweight/obese humans.
metabolic abnormality, and development of cirrhosis. Importantly, increased uric acid levels are associated with cardiovascular risk in patients with diabetes,
Prevalence of and risk factors for hepatic steatosis and nonalcoholic Fatty liver disease in people with type 2 diabetes: the Edinburgh Type 2 Diabetes study.
Fructose-dependent dysbiosis may also contribute to the pathogenesis of NASH as changes in gut microbiota species are noted in patients with NAFLD related to fructose consumption.
Uric acid induces hepatic steatosis by generation of mitochondrial oxidative stress: potential role in fructose-dependent and -independent fatty liver.
Although the consequences of fructose exposure on a hepatocellular level are well characterised, detailed mechanistic studies defining the metabolic pathways in humans or human cells are rare. It is also notable that use of a global murine KO model cannot discriminate hepatic and extrahepatic effects on the kidney
We have used a culture system incorporating both hepatocytes and NPCs to dissect the consequences of fructose administration in human NAFLD. Addition of fructose primed TG accumulation and upregulation of lipogenic genes, which was inhibited in the presence of KHK inhibitor. This is in agreement with our animal study where the Amylin diet caused increased hepatic TG accumulation accompanied by reduced TG export. We also observed a reduction in hepatoprotective
Circulating concentrations of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, and soluble leukocyte adhesion molecule-1 in overweight/obese men and women consuming fructose- or glucose-sweetened beverages for 10 weeks.
with production of chemokines such as CCL2. Much of the profibrotic effect of chemokines such as CCL2 and the CXCR3 ligands relates to their ability to modify hepatic immune cell recruitment and function to promote activation of stellate cells. However, CXCL10 has also been shown to directly mediate stellate cell chemotaxis and RAS-dependent activation.
Signal transduction by the chemokine receptor CXCR3: activation of Ras/ERK, Src, and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt controls cell migration and proliferation in human vascular pericytes.
This could explain the early fibrogenesis evident in our mice fed the Amylin diet (Fig. S1A), and the induction of profibrotic genes such as Col1A1 within fructose-exposed NPCs in our co-culture system. Although KHK inhibition may have a predominant effect on parenchymal cells, thereby reducing their production of proinflammatory and profibrotic mediators, it is possible that fructose metabolism can directly promote fibrogenesis through effects on hepatic myofibroblast populations. We showed that both human stellate cells and fibroblasts expressed KHK mRNA, and previous evidence suggests that fructose 1–6 biphosphate can modify cell phenotype to reverse stellate cell activation.
This is in agreement with our evidence that interference with fructose metabolite generation through inhibition of hexokinase reduces profibrogenic gene expression in LX2 cells. This suggests that pharmacological inhibition of KHK has the potential to modify hepatocyte lipogenesis, to prime cytoprotective mechanisms, and reduce liver fibrogenesis.
We report that fructose administration led to accumulation within the tissue and rapid transit into glycolytic and lipogenic pathways. DNL was facilitated by the generation of glycerol from fructose, and we also observed the conversion of pyruvate to alanine and lactate. Although accumulation of labelled fructose reflects direct uptake of labelled carbohydrate, fructose generation from glucose via the polyol pathway may be relevant over the timeframe of our experiments. This is supported by a reduction in labelled fructose in our inhibited samples (Fig. 4). Here aldose reductase would generate sorbitol from glucose and this could be modified by sorbitol dehydrogenase to fructose.
We see an accumulation of label in sorbitol over time and also note that this was more pronounced in the presence of KHK inhibition. Notably the pattern was slightly different in the NASH context (Fig. S6) with quicker accumulation of labelled fructose and little change in labelled glucose over time. This may reflect the hyperactivity of the polyol pathway in NAFLD
accompanied by a decrease in lactate, alanine, and glycerol that was particularly marked in cirrhotic livers. Elevated alanine and lactate after fructose exposure fit with NMR spectroscopy studies in patients with NAFLD. Here hepatic alanine and lactate concentrations, particularly when combined with TG concentrations showed promise as a tool to discriminate between simple steatosis and NASH.
Hepatic alanine differentiates nonalcoholic steatohepatitis from simple steatosis in humans and mice: A proton MR spectroscopy study with long echo time.
Importantly, we observed no associated hepatocellular toxicity in our treated samples, genetically deficient mice exhibit normal lifespan and physiology, and early stage human trials in patients with NAFLD suggest the compound is well tolerated with no serious adverse events reported. Patients with hereditary fructosuria owing to KHK gene variants exhibit limited consequences unless fructose excess is ingested, whereupon there is a persistent rise in blood fructose levels and excretion of fructose into urine. This suggests that chronic administration of an inhibitor would not exhibit a mechanism-based safety issue.
Thus, in conclusion, we have for the first time carried out NMR-based metabolic analysis of human liver which explains the hepatic consequences of fructose administration, and provide both human and murine evidence to support the benefit of using KHK inhibition to improve steatosis, fibrosis, and inflammation in patients with NAFLD.
Financial support
This study includes independent research supported by the Birmingham National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre, based at the University of Birmingham. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NHS, the National Institute of Health Research or the Department of Health and Social Care. The work was part funded by a collaborative research grant to the University of Birmingham from Takeda Pharmaceuticals Inc. Both parties were involved in experimental design/data generation, and manuscript drafting.
Authors' contributions
Study design and interpretation: ELS, RS, ULG, GH, PFL, HY, REF, BKC, RAF, JER, BRW, JP, DME.
Experimental data generation and analysis: ELS, RS, EN, KM, HO, HY, SAH, MJL, MO, RAF, NN, BRW.
Drafting manuscript ELS, RS, BKC, HY, GH, DME and PFL.
Approved the final version of the manuscript: all authors.
Data availability statement
Where possible, experimental data can be shared via contact with the corresponding author. This excludes commercially sensitive information or data relating to individual human tissue donors.
Conflicts of interest
ELS, RS, EN, ULG, GH, and PFL have no conflicts of interest to declare. REF, BKC, SAH, MJL, MO, RAF, JER, and BRW are employees and stock holders of HemoShear Therapeutics. KM, HO, HY, JP, REF, NN, and DME are employees and stock holders of Takeda.
Please refer to the accompanying ICMJE disclosure forms for further details.
CXC chemokine ligand 16 promotes integrin-mediated adhesion of liver-infiltrating lymphocytes to cholangiocytes and hepatocytes within the inflamed human liver.
Consuming fructose-sweetened, not glucose-sweetened, beverages increases visceral adiposity and lipids and decreases insulin sensitivity in overweight/obese humans.
Consumption of fructose- but not glucose-sweetened beverages for 10 weeks increases circulating concentrations of uric acid, retinol binding protein-4, and gamma-glutamyl transferase activity in overweight/obese humans.
Prevalence of and risk factors for hepatic steatosis and nonalcoholic Fatty liver disease in people with type 2 diabetes: the Edinburgh Type 2 Diabetes study.
Uric acid induces hepatic steatosis by generation of mitochondrial oxidative stress: potential role in fructose-dependent and -independent fatty liver.
Circulating concentrations of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, and soluble leukocyte adhesion molecule-1 in overweight/obese men and women consuming fructose- or glucose-sweetened beverages for 10 weeks.
Signal transduction by the chemokine receptor CXCR3: activation of Ras/ERK, Src, and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt controls cell migration and proliferation in human vascular pericytes.
Hepatic alanine differentiates nonalcoholic steatohepatitis from simple steatosis in humans and mice: A proton MR spectroscopy study with long echo time.