Ethanol-induced hepatic autophagy: Friend or foe?

World J Hepatol. 2015 May 28;7(9):1154-6. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v7.i9.1154.

Abstract

Excessive alcohol intake may induce hepatic apoptosis, steatosis, fibrosis, cirrhosis and even cancer. Ethanol-induced activation of general or selective autophagy as mitophagy or lipophagy in hepatocytes is generally considered a prosurvival mechanism. On the other side of the coin, upregulation of autophagy in non-hepatocytes as stellate cells may stimulate fibrogenesis and subsequently induce detrimental effects on the liver. The autophagic response of other non-hepatocytes as macrophages and endothelial cells is unknown yet and needs to be investigated as these cells play important roles in ethanol-induced hepatic steatosis and damage. Selective pharmacological stimulation of autophagy in hepatocytes may be of therapeutic importance in alcoholic liver disease.

Keywords: Alcohol; Autophagy; Hepatocytes; Lipophagy; Macrophages; Mitophagy; Stellate cells.