Dietary cholesterol promotes steatohepatitis related hepatocellular carcinoma through dysregulated metabolism and calcium signaling.
Jessie Qiaoyi LiangNarcissus TeohLixia XuSharon PokXiangchun LiEagle S H ChuJonathan ChiuLing DongArfianti ArfiantiW Geoffrey HaighMatthew M YehGeorge N IoannouJoseph J Y SungGeoffrey FarrellXin YuPublished in: Nature communications (2018)
The underlining mechanisms of dietary cholesterol and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) in contributing to hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remain undefined. Here we demonstrated that high-fat-non-cholesterol-fed mice developed simple steatosis, whilst high-fat-high-cholesterol-fed mice developed NASH. Moreover, dietary cholesterol induced larger and more numerous NASH-HCCs than non-cholesterol-induced steatosis-HCCs in diethylnitrosamine-treated mice. NASH-HCCs displayed significantly more aberrant gene expression-enriched signaling pathways and more non-synonymous somatic mutations than steatosis-HCCs (335 ± 84/sample vs 43 ± 13/sample). Integrated genetic and expressional alterations in NASH-HCCs affected distinct genes pertinent to five pathways: calcium, insulin, cell adhesion, axon guidance and metabolism. Some of the novel aberrant gene expression, mutations and core oncogenic pathways identified in cholesterol-associated NASH-HCCs in mice were confirmed in human NASH-HCCs, which included metabolism-related genes (ALDH18A1, CAD, CHKA, POLD4, PSPH and SQLE) and recurrently mutated genes (RYR1, MTOR, SDK1, CACNA1H and RYR2). These findings add insights into the link of cholesterol to NASH and NASH-HCC and provide potential therapeutic targets.
Keyphrases
- low density lipoprotein
- high fat diet induced
- gene expression
- insulin resistance
- type diabetes
- dna methylation
- high fat diet
- genome wide
- endothelial cells
- signaling pathway
- coronary artery disease
- high glucose
- metabolic syndrome
- risk assessment
- cell adhesion
- adipose tissue
- transcription factor
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- human health
- genome wide identification
- induced apoptosis