Hepatokines and Their Role in Cardiohepatic Interactions in Heart Failure

Wael A Shouman, Sarah Najmeddine, Lilas Sinno, Ryan Dib Nehme, Alaa Ghawi, Joanna A Ziade, Raffaele Altara, Ghadir Amin, George W Booz, Fouad A Zouein*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journal(Systematic) Review article peer-review

Abstract

Heart failure is one of the leading causes of death and disease worldwide. It is a condition that affects multiple systems within the body. There is a large body of evidence supporting that the liver is a major organ involved in the pathogenesis of heart failure. Cardiac hepatopathy and cirrhotic cardiomyopathy are two conditions that are associated with poor clinical outcomes in patients with heart failure. Despite the extensive proposed explanations of the mechanisms entailing heart failure, there remains a gap in the role of proteins and metabolic regulators produced by hepatocytes and their effect on the development, progression, and prognosis of heart failure, including adverse cardiac remodeling, fibrosis, cardiac cachexia, and renal dysfunction associated with heart failure. The aim of this review is to identify the major hepatokines being studied (adropin, fetuin-A, fetuin-B, FGF-21, selenoprotein P and α1-microglobulin) as modulators of metabolic homeostasis and cardiac dysfunction in heart failure. Research suggests that these factors play a role in modulating oxidative stress, fibrosis, apoptosis, inflammatory responses, immune cell activation, mitochondrial dysfunction, and cellular migration. The exact role of each of these hepatokines is under on-going research and requires more investigations for future clinical use.

Original languageEnglish
Article number177356
JournalEuropean Journal of Pharmacology
Volume992
Early online date5 Apr 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 5 Apr 2025

Keywords

  • Cardiomyopathy
  • energy metabolism
  • hepatokine
  • homeostasis
  • liver

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