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Impaired ketogenesis and increased acetyl-CoA oxidation promote hyperglycemia in human fatty liver
Justin A. Fletcher, Stanisław Deja, Santhosh Satapati, Xiaorong Fu, Shawn C. Burgess, Jeffrey D. Browning
Justin A. Fletcher, Stanisław Deja, Santhosh Satapati, Xiaorong Fu, Shawn C. Burgess, Jeffrey D. Browning
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Research Article Hepatology Metabolism

Impaired ketogenesis and increased acetyl-CoA oxidation promote hyperglycemia in human fatty liver

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Abstract

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a highly prevalent, and potentially morbid, disease that affects one-third of the US population. Normal liver safely accommodates lipid excess during fasting or carbohydrate restriction by increasing their oxidation to acetyl-CoA and ketones, yet lipid excess during NAFLD leads to hyperglycemia and, in some, steatohepatitis. To examine potential mechanisms, we studied flux through pathways of hepatic oxidative metabolism and gluconeogenesis using 5 simultaneous stable isotope tracers in ketotic (24-hour-fasted) individuals with a wide range of hepatic triglyceride content levels (0%–52%). Ketogenesis was progressively impaired as hepatic steatosis and glycemia worsened. Conversely, the alternative pathway for acetyl-CoA metabolism, oxidation in the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, was upregulated in NAFLD as ketone production diminished and positively correlated with rates of gluconeogenesis and plasma glucose concentrations. Increased respiration and energy generation that occurred in liver when β-oxidation and TCA cycle activity were coupled may explain these findings, inasmuch as calculated hepatic oxygen consumption was higher during fatty liver and highly correlated with gluconeogenesis. These findings demonstrate that increased glucose production and hyperglycemia in NAFLD is a consequence not of acetyl-CoA production per se, but rather of how acetyl-CoA is further metabolized in liver.

Authors

Justin A. Fletcher, Stanisław Deja, Santhosh Satapati, Xiaorong Fu, Shawn C. Burgess, Jeffrey D. Browning

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Figure 2

Fasting ketosis is impaired in subjects with NAFLD.

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Fasting ketosis is impaired in subjects with NAFLD.
Plasma (A) ketones a...
Plasma (A) ketones and (B) NEFAs were measured during H-E clamp and after a 12- and 24-hour fast. Both ketone (control: n = 16, NAFLD: n = 21) and NEFA (control: n = 17, NAFLD: n = 22) concentrations were higher among those with fatty liver during an H-E clamp. In 12-hour-fasted subjects, plasma ketones were normal in those with NAFLD despite increased circulating NEFAs. After a 24-hour fast, plasma NEFA and ketone concentrations were ≈30% lower in NAFLD subjects compared with controls. There was a significant interaction term for both plasma ketones and NEFAs, indicating that control and NAFLD subjects respond differently to the transition from high to low insulin concentrations. (C) The lower plasma ketone concentrations among those with NAFLD at 24 hours of fasting were due to reduced plasma BHB, but not AcAc, concentrations. Significance was determined using 2-tailed Student’s t test for unpaired data and 2-way repeated-measures ANOVA when appropriate.

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