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Silencing hepatic MCJ attenuates non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) by increasing mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation

Authors :
Fisiología
Fisiologia
Barbier Torres, Lucía
Fortner, Karen A.
Iruzubieta, Paula
Delgado, Teresa C.
Giddings, Emily
Chen, Youdinghuan
Champagne, Devin
Fernández Ramos, David
Mestre, Daniela
Gómez Santos, Beatriz
Varela Rey, Marta
Gutiérrez de Juan, Virginia
Fernández Tussy, Pablo
Zubiete Franco, Imanol
García Monzón, Carmelo
González Rodríguez, Águeda
Oza, Dhaval
Valença Pereira, Felipe
Fang, Qian
Crespo, Javier
Aspichueta Celaá, Patricia
Tremblay, Frederic
Christensen, Brock C.
Anguita Castillo, Juan de Dios
Martínez Chantar, María Luz
Rincón, Mercedes
Fisiología
Fisiologia
Barbier Torres, Lucía
Fortner, Karen A.
Iruzubieta, Paula
Delgado, Teresa C.
Giddings, Emily
Chen, Youdinghuan
Champagne, Devin
Fernández Ramos, David
Mestre, Daniela
Gómez Santos, Beatriz
Varela Rey, Marta
Gutiérrez de Juan, Virginia
Fernández Tussy, Pablo
Zubiete Franco, Imanol
García Monzón, Carmelo
González Rodríguez, Águeda
Oza, Dhaval
Valença Pereira, Felipe
Fang, Qian
Crespo, Javier
Aspichueta Celaá, Patricia
Tremblay, Frederic
Christensen, Brock C.
Anguita Castillo, Juan de Dios
Martínez Chantar, María Luz
Rincón, Mercedes
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is considered the next major health epidemic with an estimated 25% worldwide prevalence. No drugs have yet been approved and NAFLD remains a major unmet need. Here, we identify MCJ (Methylation-Controlled J protein) as a target for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), an advanced phase of NAFLD. MCJ is an endogenous negative regulator of the respiratory chain Complex I that acts to restrain mitochondrial respiration. We show that therapeutic targeting of MCJ in the liver with nanoparticle- and GalNAc-formulated siRNA efficiently reduces liver lipid accumulation and fibrosis in multiple NASH mouse models. Decreasing MCJ expression enhances the capacity of hepatocytes to mediate beta -oxidation of fatty acids and minimizes lipid accumulation, which results in reduced hepatocyte damage and fibrosis. Moreover, MCJ levels in the liver of NAFLD patients are elevated relative to healthy subjects. Thus, inhibition of MCJ emerges as an alternative approach to treat NAFLD. Non-alcoholic fatty liver (NAFLD) disease causes degeneration of the liver, affects about 25% of people globally, and has no approved treatment. Here, the authors show that the therapeutic siRNA-driven silencing of MCJ in the liver is an effective and safe treatment for NAFLD in multiple mouse models.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
We thank Douglas Taatjes and Nicole Bouffard for help with confocal microscopy analysis (Microscopy Imaging Center) at the University of Vermont. We also thank the University of Vermont Medical Center's Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Histology and Clinical Laboratories for assistance with liver section staining and AST/ALT measurement, respectively. This work was supported by NIH STTR R41DK112429 (M.R.), NIH PO GM103496 (M.R.), Mitotherapeutix LLC (M.R., K.F, and M.L.M.-C.), MINECO/Feder SAF2015-65327-R and RTI2018-096494-B-100 (J.A.), MINECO/Feder SAF2017-87301-R (M.L.M-C.), BIOEF (M.L.M.-C.), EITB Maratoia BIO15/CA/014 (M.L.M-C), BBVA (M.L.M.-C.), La Caixa Foundation (M.L.M.-C.), Basque Country Health Department 2013111114 (M.L.M-C), MINECO/Feder SAF2015-64352-R (P.A.) and MINECO-Feder RTI2018-095134-B-100 (P.A.). ISCIII-Feder PI17/00535 (C.G.-M.), ISCIII-Feder CP14/00181, and PI16/00823 (A.G-R.), and Francisco Cobos Foundation (A.G.-R.). CIC bioGUNE is the recipient of a Severo Ochoa Excellence Accreditation (SEV-2016-0644) by the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities., English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1202406377
Document Type :
Electronic Resource