학술논문

Fatty Acid Excess Dysregulates CARF to Initiate the Development of Hepatic Steatosis
Document Type
article
Source
Cells. 12(7)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Liver Disease
Nutrition
Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis
Digestive Diseases
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Animals
Mice
Endoribonucleases
Fatty Acids
Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
Palmitates
Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases
Humans
Hep G2 Cells
Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins
RNA-Binding Proteins
CARF
lipo-toxicity
hepatic steatosis
ER-stress
oxidative stress
metabolic stress
NAFLD
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
CARF (CDKN2AIP) regulates cellular fate in response to various stresses. However, its role in metabolic stress is unknown. We found that fatty livers from mice exhibit low CARF expression. Similarly, overloaded palmitate inhibited CARF expression in HepG2 cells, suggesting that excess fat-induced stress downregulates hepatic CARF. In agreement with this, silencing and overexpressing CARF resulted in higher and lower fat accumulation in HepG2 cells, respectively. Furthermore, CARF overexpression lowered the ectopic palmitate accumulation in HepG2 cells. We were interested in understanding the role of hepatic CARF and underlying mechanisms in the development of NAFLD. Mechanistically, transcriptome analysis revealed that endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and oxidative stress pathway genes significantly altered in the absence of CARF. IRE1α, GRP78, and CHOP, markers of ER stress, were increased, and the treatment with TUDCA, an ER stress inhibitor, attenuated fat accumulation in CARF-deficient cells. Moreover, silencing CARF caused a reduction of GPX3 and TRXND3, leading to oxidative stress and apoptotic cell death. Intriguingly, CARF overexpression in HFD-fed mice significantly decreased hepatic steatosis. Furthermore, overexpression of CARF ameliorated the aberrant ER function and oxidative stress caused by fat accumulation. Our results further demonstrated that overexpression of CARF alleviates HFD-induced insulin resistance assessed with ITT and GTT assay. Altogether, we conclude that excess fat-induced reduction of CARF dysregulates ER functions and lipid metabolism leading to hepatic steatosis.