Cocaine-derived hippuric acid activates mtDNA-STING signaling in alcoholic liver disease: Implications for alcohol and cocaine co-abuse

The simultaneous abuse of alcohol-cocaine is known to cause stronger and more unpredictable cellular damage in the liver, heart, and brain. However, the mechanistic crosstalk between cocaine and alcohol in liver injury remains unclear. The findings revealed cocaine-induced liver injury and inflammat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell biology and toxicology 2024-08, Vol.40 (1), p.71
Hauptverfasser: Ma, Hwan, Lee, Gyu-Rim, Park, Jeong-Su, Lee, Jin, Wang, Feng, Ma, Yuanqiang, Sui, Guo-Yan, Rustamov, Nodir, Kim, Sou Hyun, Jung, Young-Suk, Yoo, Hwan-Soo, Han, Sang-Bae, Hong, Jin Tae, Yun, Jaesuk, Roh, Yoon Seok
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The simultaneous abuse of alcohol-cocaine is known to cause stronger and more unpredictable cellular damage in the liver, heart, and brain. However, the mechanistic crosstalk between cocaine and alcohol in liver injury remains unclear. The findings revealed cocaine-induced liver injury and inflammation in both marmosets and mice. Of note, co-administration of cocaine and ethanol in mice causes more severe liver damage than individual treatment. The metabolomic analysis confirmed that hippuric acid (HA) is the most abundant metabolite in marmoset serum after cocaine consumption and that is formed in primary marmoset hepatocytes. HA, a metabolite of cocaine, increases mitochondrial DNA leakage and subsequently increases the production of proinflammatory factors via STING signaling in Kupffer cells (KCs). In addition, conditioned media of cocaine-treated KC induced hepatocellular necrosis via alcohol-induced TNFR1. Finally, disruption of STING signaling in vivo ameliorated co-administration of alcohol- and cocaine-induced liver damage and inflammation. These findings postulate intervention of HA-STING-TNFR1 axis as a novel strategy for treatment of alcohol- and cocaine-induced excessive liver damage. Graphical Abstract
ISSN:0742-2091
1573-6822
1573-6822
DOI:10.1007/s10565-024-09901-5