Annals of Hepatology (Sep 2021)
Effects of chronic HBV infection on lipid metabolism in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: A lipidomic analysis
Abstract
Introduction and objectives: Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection exerts an impact on lipid metabolism, but its interaction with dysmetabolism-based non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) remains uncertain. The purpose of the study was to investigate the effects of HBV infection on lipid metabolism, hepatic steatosis and related impairments of NAFLD patients. Methods: Biopsy-proven Chinese NAFLD patients with (NAFLD-HBV group, n = 21) or without chronic HBV infection (NAFLD group, n = 41) were enrolled in the case-control study. Their serum lipidomics was subjected to individual investigation by ultra-performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry. Steatosis, activity, and fibrosis (SAF) scoring revealed the NAFLD-specific pathological characteristics. Results: Chronic HBV infection was associated with global alteration of serum lipidomics in NAFLD patients. Upregulation of phosphatidylcholine (PCs), choline plasmalogen (PC-Os) and downregulation of free fatty acids (FFAs), lysophosphatidylcholine (LPCs) dominated the HBV-related lipidomic characteristics. Compared to those of NAFLD group, the levels of serum hepatoxic lipids (FFA16:0, FFA16: 1, FFA18:1, FFA18:2) were significantly lowered in the NAFLD-HBV group. These low-level FFAs demonstrated correlation to statistical improvements in aspartate aminotransferase activity (FFA16:0, r = 0.33; FFA16:1, r = 0.37; FFA18:1, r = 0.32; FFA18:2, r = 0.42), hepatocyte steatosis (FFA16: 1, r = 0.39; FFA18:1, r = 0.39; FFA18:2, r = 0.32), and ballooning (FFA16:0, r = 0.30; FFA16:1, r = 0.45; FFA18:1, r = 0.36; FFA18:2, r = 0.30) (all P < 0.05). Conclusion: Chronic HBV infection may impact on the serum lipidomics and steatosis-related pathological characteristics of NAFLD.