Louvet et al.recently published the French Association for the Study of the Liver(AFEF)and the French Alcohol Society clinical guidelines(1).The AFEF guidelines are the first specific to the screening and care of alco...Louvet et al.recently published the French Association for the Study of the Liver(AFEF)and the French Alcohol Society clinical guidelines(1).The AFEF guidelines are the first specific to the screening and care of alcohol-related liver disease(ALD)in France.We compared these to the guidelines of American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases[AASLD,2020;(2)]and European Association for the Study of Liver[EASL,2018(3)];some noticeable differences and similarities emerge(Table 1).展开更多
Liver diseases are considered to predominantly possess an inherited or xenobiotic etiology.However,inheritance drives the ability to appropriately adapt to environmental stressors,and disease is the culmination of a m...Liver diseases are considered to predominantly possess an inherited or xenobiotic etiology.However,inheritance drives the ability to appropriately adapt to environmental stressors,and disease is the culmination of a maladaptive response.Thus "pure" genetic and "pure" xenobiotic liver diseases are modified by each other and other factors,identified or unknown.The purpose of this review is to highlight the knowledgebase of environmental exposure as a potential risk modifying agent for the development of liver disease by other causes.This exercise is not to argue that all liver diseases have an environmental component,but to challenge the assumption that the current state of our knowledge is sufficient in all cases to conclusively dismiss this as a possibility.This review also discusses key new tools and approaches that will likely be critical to address this question in the future.Taken together,identifying the key gaps in our understanding is critical for the field to move forward,or at the very least to "know what we don't know."展开更多
Occupational and environmental exposures to industrial chemicals are well known to cause hepatotoxicity and liver injury.However,despite extensive evidence showing that exposure can lead to disease,current research ap...Occupational and environmental exposures to industrial chemicals are well known to cause hepatotoxicity and liver injury.However,despite extensive evidence showing that exposure can lead to disease,current research approaches and regulatory policies fail to address the possibility that subtle changes caused by low level exposure to chemicals may also enhance preexisting conditions.In recent years,the conceptual understanding of the contribution of environmental chemicals to liver disease has progressed significantly.Mitochondria are often target of toxicity of environmental toxicants resulting in multisystem disorders involving different cells,tissues,and organs.Here,we review persistent maladaptive changes to mitochondria in response to environmental toxicant exposure as a mechanism of hepatotoxicity.With better understanding of the mechanism(s) and risk factors that mediate the initiation and progression of toxicant-induced liver disease,rational targeted therapy can be developed to better predict risk,as well as to treat or prevent this disease.展开更多
基金This study was supported,in part,by grants from NIH(Nos.R01 AA021978 and P30 DK120531).
文摘Louvet et al.recently published the French Association for the Study of the Liver(AFEF)and the French Alcohol Society clinical guidelines(1).The AFEF guidelines are the first specific to the screening and care of alcohol-related liver disease(ALD)in France.We compared these to the guidelines of American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases[AASLD,2020;(2)]and European Association for the Study of Liver[EASL,2018(3)];some noticeable differences and similarities emerge(Table 1).
基金Supported, in part, by grants from NIH (R01 AA021978, P30 DK120531, and R21 ES031531, USA)。
文摘Liver diseases are considered to predominantly possess an inherited or xenobiotic etiology.However,inheritance drives the ability to appropriately adapt to environmental stressors,and disease is the culmination of a maladaptive response.Thus "pure" genetic and "pure" xenobiotic liver diseases are modified by each other and other factors,identified or unknown.The purpose of this review is to highlight the knowledgebase of environmental exposure as a potential risk modifying agent for the development of liver disease by other causes.This exercise is not to argue that all liver diseases have an environmental component,but to challenge the assumption that the current state of our knowledge is sufficient in all cases to conclusively dismiss this as a possibility.This review also discusses key new tools and approaches that will likely be critical to address this question in the future.Taken together,identifying the key gaps in our understanding is critical for the field to move forward,or at the very least to "know what we don't know."
基金funded by awards from the National Institutes of Health: K01 DK096042, R03 DK107912, R21 ES031531, P30DK120531 and P20GM113226, USA。
文摘Occupational and environmental exposures to industrial chemicals are well known to cause hepatotoxicity and liver injury.However,despite extensive evidence showing that exposure can lead to disease,current research approaches and regulatory policies fail to address the possibility that subtle changes caused by low level exposure to chemicals may also enhance preexisting conditions.In recent years,the conceptual understanding of the contribution of environmental chemicals to liver disease has progressed significantly.Mitochondria are often target of toxicity of environmental toxicants resulting in multisystem disorders involving different cells,tissues,and organs.Here,we review persistent maladaptive changes to mitochondria in response to environmental toxicant exposure as a mechanism of hepatotoxicity.With better understanding of the mechanism(s) and risk factors that mediate the initiation and progression of toxicant-induced liver disease,rational targeted therapy can be developed to better predict risk,as well as to treat or prevent this disease.