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ACBP/DBI protein neutralization confers autophagy-dependent organ protection through inhibition of cell loss, inflammation, and fibrosis

Omar Motiño, Flavia Lambertucci, Gerasimos Anagnostopoulos, Sijing Li, Jihoon Nah, Francesca Castoldi, Laura Senovilla, Léa Montégut, Hui Chen, Sylvère Durand, Mélanie Bourgin, Fanny Aprahamian, Nitharsshini Nirmalathasan, Karla Alvarez-Valadez, Allan Sauvat

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2022 · ▲ 51 citations

Abstract

Acyl-coenzyme A (CoA)–binding protein (ACBP), also known as diazepam-binding inhibitor (DBI), is an extracellular feedback regulator of autophagy(definition). Here, we report that injection of a monoclonal antibody neutralizing ACBP/DBI (α-DBI) protects the murine liver against ischemia/reperfusion damage, intoxication by acetaminophen and concanavalin A, and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis caused by methionine/choline-deficient diet as well as against liver fibrosis induced by bile duct ligation or carbon tetrachloride. α-DBI downregulated proinflammatory and profibrotic genes and upregulated antioxidant defenses and fatty acid oxidation in the liver. The hepatoprotective effects of α-DBI were mimicked by the induction of ACBP/DBI-specific autoantibodies, an inducible Acbp/Dbi knockout or a constitutive Gabrg2 F77I mutation that abolishes ACBP/DBI binding to the GABA A receptor. Liver-protective α-DBI effects were lost when autophagy was pharmacologically blocked or genetically inhibited by knockout of Atg4b . Of note, α-DBI also reduced myocardium infarction and lung fibrosis, supporting the contention that it mediates broad organ-protective effects against multiple insults.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1073/pnas.2207344119
Canonical
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Fetched
2026-06-18 MST

Cite this

APA
Motiño, O., Lambertucci, F., Anagnostopoulos, G., Li, S., Nah, J., Castoldi, F., Senovilla, L., Montégut, L., Chen, H., Durand, S., Bourgin, M., Aprahamian, F., Nirmalathasan, N., Alvarez-Valadez, K., Sauvat, A., Carbonnier, V., Djavaheri‐Mergny, M., Pietrocola, F., Sadoshima, J., &amp; Maiuri, M.C. (2022). ACBP/DBI protein neutralization confers autophagy-dependent organ protection through inhibition of cell loss, inflammation, and fibrosis. <em>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences</em>. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2207344119
Vancouver
Motiño O, Lambertucci F, Anagnostopoulos G, Li S, Nah J, Castoldi F, et al. ACBP/DBI protein neutralization confers autophagy-dependent organ protection through inhibition of cell loss, inflammation, and fibrosis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2022. doi:10.1073/pnas.2207344119.
BibTeX
@unpublished{omar2022ACBPDB, title = {ACBP/DBI protein neutralization confers autophagy-dependent organ protection through inhibition of cell loss, inflammation, and fibrosis}, author = {Omar Motiño and Flavia Lambertucci and Gerasimos Anagnostopoulos and Sijing Li and Jihoon Nah and Francesca Castoldi and Laura Senovilla and Léa Montégut and Hui Chen and Sylvère Durand and Mélanie Bourgin and Fanny Aprahamian and Nitharsshini Nirmalathasan and Karla Alvarez-Valadez and Allan Sauvat and Vincent Carbonnier and Mojgan Djavaheri‐Mergny and Federico Pietrocola and Junichi Sadoshima and Maria Chiara Maiuri and Isabelle Martins and Guido Kroemer}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, year = {2022}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.2207344119}, }

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