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AGER1 downregulation associates with fibrosis in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis and type 2 diabetes

Authors :
Gregory W. Charville
Ali Dehnad
Gergely Mozes
Kimberly A. Wong
Joy X. Jiang
Mohammed Ali
Kristin A Olson
Natalie J. Török
Sarah R. Fish
Yuan Li
Suvarthi Das
Weiguo Fan
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation, vol 130, iss 8, J Clin Invest
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2020.

Abstract

Type 2 diabetes is clinically associated with progressive necroinflammation and fibrosis in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). Advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) accumulate during prolonged hyperglycemia, but the mechanistic pathways that lead to accelerated liver fibrosis have not been well defined. In this study, we show that the AGEs clearance receptor AGER1 was downregulated in patients with NASH and diabetes and in our NASH models, whereas the proinflammatory receptor RAGE was induced. These findings were associated with necroinflammatory, fibrogenic, and pro-oxidant activity via the NADPH oxidase 4. Inhibition of AGEs or RAGE deletion in hepatocytes in vivo reversed these effects. We demonstrate that dysregulation of NRF2 by neddylation of cullin 3 was linked to AGER1 downregulation and that induction of NRF2 using an adeno-associated virus–mediated approach in hepatocytes in vivo reversed AGER1 downregulation, lowered the level of AGEs, and improved proinflammatory and fibrogenic responses in mice on a high AGEs diet. In patients with NASH and diabetes or insulin resistance, low AGER1 levels were associated with hepatocyte ballooning degeneration and ductular reaction. Collectively, prolonged exposure to AGEs in the liver promotes an AGER1/RAGE imbalance and consequent redox, inflammatory, and fibrogenic activity in NASH.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation, vol 130, iss 8, J Clin Invest
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6f11987b85c0fedd525f251a6d6e4b06