Kupffer cell programming by maternal obesity triggers fatty liver disease
Title (eng)
Kupffer cell programming by maternal obesity triggers fatty liver disease
Author
Iva Splichalova
Nelli Blank-Stein
Franzisca Petrovic
Mohamed H. Yaghmour
Joachim L. Schultze
Martin Guilliams
Jan Hasenauer
Nora R. Balzer
Abstract (eng)
Kupffer cells (KCs) are tissue-resident macrophages that colonize the liver early during embryogenesis1. Upon liver colonization, KCs rapidly acquire a tissue-specific transcriptional signature, mature alongside the developing liver and adapt to its functions. Throughout development and adulthood, KCs perform distinct core functions that are essential for liver and organismal homeostasis, including supporting fetal erythropoiesis, postnatal erythrocyte recycling and liver metabolism. However, whether perturbations of macrophage core functions during development contribute to or cause disease at postnatal stages is poorly understood. Here, we utilize a mouse model of maternal obesity to perturb KC functions during gestation. We show that offspring exposed to maternal obesity develop fatty liver disease, driven by aberrant developmental programming of KCs that persists into adulthood. Programmed KCs promote lipid uptake by hepatocytes through apolipoprotein secretion. KC depletion in neonate mice born to obese mothers, followed by replenishment with naive monocytes, rescues fatty liver disease. Furthermore, genetic ablation of the gene encoding hypoxia-inducible factor-α (HIF1α) in macrophages during gestation prevents the metabolic programming of KCs from oxidative phosphorylation to glycolysis, thereby averting the development of fatty liver disease. These results establish developmental perturbation of KC functions as a causal factor in fatty liver disease in adulthood and position fetal-derived macrophages as critical intergenerational messengers within the concept of developmental origins of health and diseases.
Keywords (eng)
HaematopoiesisInnate immunity
Type (eng)
Language
[eng]
Persistent identifier
Is in series
Title (eng)
Nature
Volume
644
Issue
8077
ISSN
0028-0836
Issued
2025
Number of pages
32
Publication
Springer
Version type (eng)
Date issued
2025
Access rights (eng)
License
Rights statement (eng)
© 2025, The Author(s)
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https://phaidra.vetmeduni.ac.at/o:4919 - Other links and identifiers
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- RightsLicenseRights statement© 2025, The Author(s)
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