About this Research Topic
Previously, NAFLD (Non-alcoholic fatty liver diseases) was a term that referred to a process characterized by excessive fatty infiltration in the liver in the absence of factors such as alcohol, autoimmune liver disease and viral hepatitis. However, a recent worldwide consensus has proposed the change from NAFLD to MAFLD based on the presence of one or more factors such as obesity/overweight, type 2 diabetes mellitus, or evidence of metabolic dysregulation. In this new concept, patients with MAFLD can express different inflammation or fibrosis stages, that is, this new disorder covers a broader spectrum of the liver damage.
In this Research Topic, we invite expert scholars in this area to contribute with both, original and review articles that address MAFLD from basic and clinical perspectives, elucidating novel aspects about the main molecular and cellular signaling pathways involved in the several damage processes related with MAFLD. Prospective topics include:
• Clinical diagnosis in MAFLD.
• Cellular mechanisms involved in MAFLD development: role of lipids accumulation.
• Cellular mechanisms involved in MAFLD development: importance of hyperglycemia (T2DM).
• Cellular mechanisms involved in MAFLD development: role of oxidative damage process.
• Cellular mechanisms involved in MAFLD development: role of fibrosis response
• Epigenetic aspects involved in MAFLD development.
• Alterations in lipid metabolism enzymes
• Novel pharmacologic alternatives for MAFLD treatment (basic and clinical studies).
• Main experimental models used for MAFLD study.
• Diabetes mellitus 2 and obesity, a key duo in MAFLD development.
Keywords: MAFLD, Obesity, Diabetes Mellitus, Fibrosis, Epigenetics
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.