Physiological Disturbance in Fatty Liver Energy Metabolism Converges on IGFBP2 Abundance and Regulation in Mice and Men.
Pia FahlbuschBirgit KnebelTina HörbeltDavid Monteiro BarbosaAleksandra NikolicSylvia JacobHadi Al-HasaniFrederique Van de VeldeYves Van NieuwenhoveDirk Müller-WielandBruno LapauwD Margriet OuwensBirgit KnebelPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2020)
Fatty liver occurs from simple steatosis with accumulated hepatic lipids and hepatic insulin resistance to severe steatohepatitis, with aggravated lipid accumulation and systemic insulin resistance, but this progression is still poorly understood. Analyses of hepatic gene expression patterns from alb-SREBP-1c mice with moderate, or aP2-SREBP-1c mice with aggravated, hepatic lipid accumulation revealed IGFBP2 as key nodal molecule differing between moderate and aggravated fatty liver. Reduced IGFBP2 expression in aggravated fatty liver was paralleled with promoter hypermethylation, reduced hepatic IGFBP2 secretion and IGFBP2 circulating in plasma. Physiologically, the decrease of IGFBP2 was accompanied with reduced fatty acid oxidation and increased de novo lipogenesis potentially mediated by IGF1 in primary hepatocytes. Furthermore, methyltransferase and sirtuin activities were enhanced. In humans, IGFBP2 serum concentration was lower in obese men with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and steatohepatitis (NASH) compared to non-obese controls, and liver fat reduction by weight-loss intervention correlated with an increase of IGFBP2 serum levels. In conclusion, hepatic IGFBP2 abundance correlates to its circulating level and is related to hepatic energy metabolism and de novo lipogenesis. This designates IGFBP2 as non-invasive biomarker for fatty liver disease progression and might further provide an additional variable for risk prediction for pathogenesis of fatty liver in diabetes subtype clusters.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet induced
- insulin resistance
- fatty acid
- weight loss
- gene expression
- adipose tissue
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- dna methylation
- randomized controlled trial
- high fat diet
- transcription factor
- cardiovascular disease
- bariatric surgery
- nitric oxide
- radiation therapy
- cell proliferation
- high intensity
- antibiotic resistance genes
- obese patients
- rectal cancer