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Glutamine/glutamate metabolism rewiring in reprogrammed human hepatocyte-like cells.

Maria BallesterEnrique SentandreuGiovanna LuongoRamon SantamariaMiguel BolonioMaria Isabel Alcoriza-BalaguerMartina Palomino-SchätzleinAntonio Pineda-LucenaJose CastellAgustin LahozRoque Bort
Published in: Scientific reports (2019)
Human dermal fibroblasts can be reprogrammed into hepatocyte-like (HEP-L) cells by the expression of a set of transcription factors. Yet, the metabolic rewiring suffered by reprogrammed fibroblasts remains largely unknown. Here we report, using stable isotope-resolved metabolic analysis in combination with metabolomic-lipidomic approaches that HEP-L cells mirrors glutamine/glutamate metabolism in primary cultured human hepatocytes that is very different from parental human fibroblasts. HEP-L cells diverge glutamine from multiple metabolic pathways into deamidation and glutamate secretion, just like periportal hepatocytes do. Exceptionally, glutamine contribution to lipogenic acetyl-CoA through reductive carboxylation is increased in HEP-L cells, recapitulating that of primary cultured human hepatocytes. These changes can be explained by transcriptomic rearrangements of genes involved in glutamine/glutamate metabolism. Although metabolic changes in HEP-L cells are in line with reprogramming towards the hepatocyte lineage, our conclusions are limited by the fact that HEP-L cells generated do not display a complete mature phenotype. Nevertheless, our findings are the first to characterize metabolic adaptation in HEP-L cells that could ultimately be targeted to improve fibroblasts direct reprogramming to HEP-L cells.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • endothelial cells
  • cell cycle arrest
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • signaling pathway
  • transcription factor
  • oxidative stress
  • drug delivery
  • cell proliferation
  • extracellular matrix