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Hepatocyte expressed chemerin-156 does not protect from experimental non-alcoholic steatohepatitis

Authors :
Rebekka Pohl
Laura Eichelberger
Susanne Feder
Elisabeth M. Haberl
Lisa Rein-Fischboeck
Nichole McMullen
Christopher J. Sinal
Astrid Bruckmann
Thomas S. Weiss
Michael Beck
Marcus Höring
Sabrina Krautbauer
Gerhard Liebisch
Reiner Wiest
Josef Wanninger
Christa Buechler
Source :
Pohl, Rebekka; Eichelberger, Laura; Feder, Susanne; Haberl, Elisabeth M; Rein-Fischboeck, Lisa; McMullen, Nichole; Sinal, Christopher J; Bruckmann, Astrid; Weiss, Thomas S; Beck, Michael; Höring, Marcus; Krautbauer, Sabrina; Liebisch, Gerhard; Wiest, Reiner; Wanninger, Josef; Buechler, Christa (2022). Hepatocyte expressed chemerin-156 does not protect from experimental non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. Molecular and cellular biochemistry, 477(8), pp. 2059-2071. Springer 10.1007/s11010-022-04430-3
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer, 2022.

Abstract

Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is a rapidly growing liver disease. The chemoattractant chemerin is abundant in hepatocytes, and hepatocyte expressed prochemerin protected from NASH. Prochemerin is inactive and different active isoforms have been described. Here, the effect of hepatocyte expressed muChem-156, a highly active murine chemerin isoform, was studied in the methionine–choline deficient dietary model of NASH. Mice overexpressing muChem-156 had higher hepatic chemerin protein. Serum chemerin levels and the capability of serum to activate the chemerin receptors was unchanged showing that the liver did not release active chemerin. Notably, activation of the chemerin receptors by hepatic vein blood did not increase in parallel to total chemerin protein in patients with liver cirrhosis. In experimental NASH, muChem-156 had no effect on liver lipids. Accordingly, overexpression of active chemerin in hepatocytes or treatment of hepatocytes with recombinant chemerin did not affect cellular triglyceride and cholesterol levels. Importantly, overexpression of muChem-156 in the murine liver did not change the hepatic expression of inflammatory and profibrotic genes. The downstream targets of chemerin such as p38 kinase were neither activated in the liver of muChem-156 producing mice nor in HepG2, Huh7 and Hepa1-6 cells overexpressing this isoform. Recombinant chemerin had no effect on global gene expression of primary human hepatocytes and hepatic stellate cells within 24 h of incubation. Phosphorylation of p38 kinase was, however, increased upon short-time incubation of HepG2 cells with chemerin. These findings show that muChem-156 overexpression in hepatocytes does not protect from liver steatosis and inflammation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pohl, Rebekka; Eichelberger, Laura; Feder, Susanne; Haberl, Elisabeth M; Rein-Fischboeck, Lisa; McMullen, Nichole; Sinal, Christopher J; Bruckmann, Astrid; Weiss, Thomas S; Beck, Michael; H&#246;ring, Marcus; Krautbauer, Sabrina; Liebisch, Gerhard; Wiest, Reiner; Wanninger, Josef; Buechler, Christa (2022). Hepatocyte expressed chemerin-156 does not protect from experimental non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. Molecular and cellular biochemistry, 477(8), pp. 2059-2071. Springer 10.1007/s11010-022-04430-3 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11010-022-04430-3>
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d3d2fdad06a6e1e6ba0426490eb9dc5c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48350/169473