Authors

The team led by Sophie Lotersztajn and Hélène Gilgenkrantz, in collaboration with V. Paradis (CRI), O. Lantz (Institut Curie) and M. Goodhardt (Hôpital St Louis) have just shown that inhibiting the activation of MAIT cells (Mucosal Associated Invariant T cells) can reverse liver fibrosis. Analysis of the mechanisms involved shows that blocking the activation of MAIT cells interrupts their dialogue with profibrogenic macrophages, which play a central role in hepatic fibrosis, and promotes the emergence of fibrosis-resolving macrophages. This study opens up new therapeutic perspectives for the management of cirrhosis, for which no treatment is currently available.
Abstract
Recent data have shown that liver fibrosis can regress even at later stages of cirrhosis and shifting the immune response from pro-inflammatory towards a resolutive profile is considered as a promising option. The immune regulatory networks that govern the shift of the inflammatory phenotype and thus potential reversal of liver fibrosis are lesser known. Here we show that in precision-cut human liver slices obtained from patients with end-stage fibrosis and in mouse models, inhibiting Mucosal-Associated Invariant T (MAIT) cells using pharmacological or antibody-driven approaches, limits fibrosis progression and even regresses fibrosis, following chronic toxic- or non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)-induced liver injury. Mechanistic studies, combining RNA sequencing, in vivo functional studies (performed in male mice) and co-culture experiments indicate that disruption of the MAIT cell-monocyte/macrophage interaction results in resolution of fibrosis both by increasing the frequency of restorative Ly6Clo at the expenses of pro-fibrogenic Ly6Chi monocyte-derived macrophages and promoting an autophagic phenotype in both subsets. Thus, our data show that MAIT cell activation and the consequential phenotype shift of liver macrophages are important pathogenic features of liver fibrosis and could be targeted by anti-fibrogenic therapy.
This study was published in Nature Communications : 2023 Apr 1;14(1):1830. doi: 10.1038/s41467-023-37453-5. PMID: 37005415

