International Journal of Molecular Sciences (May 2024)

Inhibition of Drp1–Filamin Protein Complex Prevents Hepatic Lipid Droplet Accumulation by Increasing Mitochondria–Lipid Droplet Contact

  • Kohei Ariyoshi,
  • Kazuhiro Nishiyama,
  • Yuri Kato,
  • Xinya Mi,
  • Tomoya Ito,
  • Yasu-Taka Azuma,
  • Akiyuki Nishimura,
  • Motohiro Nishida

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25105446
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 10
p. 5446

Abstract

Read online

Lipid droplet (LD) accumulation in hepatocytes is one of the major symptoms associated with fatty liver disease. Mitochondria play a key role in catabolizing fatty acids for energy production through β-oxidation. The interplay between mitochondria and LD assumes a crucial role in lipid metabolism, while it is obscure how mitochondrial morphology affects systemic lipid metabolism in the liver. We previously reported that cilnidipine, an already existing anti-hypertensive drug, can prevent pathological mitochondrial fission by inhibiting protein–protein interaction between dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1) and filamin, an actin-binding protein. Here, we found that cilnidipine and its new dihydropyridine (DHP) derivative, 1,4-DHP, which lacks Ca2+ channel-blocking action of cilnidipine, prevent the palmitic acid-induced Drp1–filamin interaction, LD accumulation and cytotoxicity of human hepatic HepG2 cells. Cilnidipine and 1,4-DHP also suppressed the LD accumulation accompanied by reducing mitochondrial contact with LD in obese model and high-fat diet-fed mouse livers. These results propose that targeting the Drp1–filamin interaction become a new strategy for the prevention or treatment of fatty liver disease.

Keywords