Isotype-selective roles of hepatic acetyl-CoA carboxylases in a mouse model of fatty liver disease

Martina Beretta, Calum S. Vancuylenburg, Riya Shrestha, Ellen M. Olzomer, ... Kyle L. Hoehn

Isotype-selective roles of hepatic acetyl-CoA carboxylases in a mouse model of fatty liver disease

 

Objectives

Acetyl-CoA carboxylase enzymes ACC1 and ACC2 promote liver fat storage. Accordingly, ACC inhibition represents a strategy to reverse fatty liver disease and related disorders. Human and rodent studies show that targeting both ACC isotypes can reverse some fatty liver phenotypes, but also result in unwanted metabolic phenotypes including hypertriglyceridemia. The objective of this study was to determine whether liver-selective genetic inhibition of ACC1 or ACC2 individually can reverse fatty liver disease phenotypes without adverse metabolic phenotypes in a mouse model of fatty liver disease.

Methods

Four genotypes of male C57BL/6J mice floxed for ACC1, ACC2, both ACC alleles, or no ACC alleles were fed an Amylin diet for 28 weeks to induce fatty liver disease. After 20 weeks of Amylin feeding, ACC genes were deleted in the liver by adeno-associated virus 8 (AAV8)-mediated Cre recombinase expression. Mice were metabolically phenotyped and liver disease was assessed by histopathology.

Results

Dual inhibition of ACC enzymes was necessary to achieve significant reversal of fatty liver disease and fibrosis; however, it also caused hypertriglyceridemia, weight gain, and glucose intolerance. ACC1 inhibition alone resulted in partial reversal of fatty liver disease phenotypes but drove all undesired metabolic phenotypes. In contrast, ACC2 inhibition alone had minimal effect on fatty liver, fibrosis, or metabolic phenotypes.

Conclusions

Our results indicate that complete inhibition of liver ACC activity is required to resolve fatty liver disease and fibrosis, with ACC1 inhibition being the dominant driver of unwanted metabolic dysregulation. Accordingly, selective inhibition of ACC2 with partial inhibition of ACC1 may represent a refined future approach to reverse fatty liver disease phenotypes while minimizing metabolic dysregulation.