In mammalian cells, mitochondrial dysfunction triggers the integrated stress response (ISR), in which eIF2α phosphorylation induces the transcription factor ATF4
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. However, how mitochondrial stress is relayed to ATF4 is unknown. We found that HRI is the eIF2α kinase necessary and sufficient for this relay. In a genome-wide CRISPRi screen, we identified factors upstream of HRI: OMA1, a mitochondrial stress-activated protease, and DELE1, a little-characterized protein we found to be associated with the inner mitochondrial membrane. Mitochondrial stress stimulates OMA1-dependent cleavage of DELE1, leading to its accumulation in the cytosol, where it interacts with HRI and activates its eIF2α kinase activity. Additionally, DELE1 is required for ATF4 translation downstream of eIF2α phosphorylation. Blockade of the OMA1-DELE1-HRI pathway triggers an alternative response inducing specific molecular chaperones. Therefore, this pathway is a potential therapeutic target enabling fine-tuning of the ISR for beneficial outcomes in diseases involving mitochondrial dysfunction.
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is an important clinical problem, which has received more attention in recent decades. It can be induced by small chemical molecules, biological agents, traditional Chinese medicines (TCM), natural medicines (NM), health products (HP), and dietary supplements (DS). Idiosyncratic DILI is far more common than intrinsic DILI clinically and can be classified into hepatocellular injury, cholestatic injury, hepatocellular-cholestatic mixed injury, and vascular injury based on the types of injured target cells. The CSH guidelines summarized the epidemiology, pathogenesis, pathology, and clinical manifestation and gives 16 evidence-based recommendations on diagnosis, differential diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of DILI.
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