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Hepatic kinome atlas: An in‐depth identification of kinase pathways in liver fibrosis of humans and rodents

Authors :
Justin F. Creeden
Zachary A. Kipp
Mei Xu
Robert M. Flight
Hunter N. B. Moseley
Genesee J. Martinez
Wang‐Hsin Lee
Khaled Alganem
Ali S. Imami
Megan R. McMullen
Sanjoy Roychowdhury
Atta M. Nawabi
Jennifer A. Hipp
Samir Softic
Steven A. Weinman
Robert McCullumsmith
Laura E. Nagy
Terry D. Hinds
Source :
Hepatology. 76:1376-1388
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022.

Abstract

Resolution of pathways that converge to induce deleterious effects in hepatic diseases, such as in the later stages, have potential antifibrotic effects that may improve outcomes. We aimed to explore whether humans and rodents display similar fibrotic signaling networks.We assiduously mapped kinase pathways using 340 substrate targets, upstream bioinformatic analysis of kinase pathways, and over 2000 random sampling iterations using the PamGene PamStation kinome microarray chip technology. Using this technology, we characterized a large number of kinases with altered activity in liver fibrosis of both species. Gene expression and immunostaining analyses validated many of these kinases as bona fide signaling events. Surprisingly, the insulin receptor emerged as a considerable protein tyrosine kinase that is hyperactive in fibrotic liver disease in humans and rodents. Discoidin domain receptor tyrosine kinase, activated by collagen that increases during fibrosis, was another hyperactive protein tyrosine kinase in humans and rodents with fibrosis. The serine/threonine kinases found to be the most active in fibrosis were dystrophy type 1 protein kinase and members of the protein kinase family of kinases. We compared the fibrotic events over four models: humans with cirrhosis and three murine models with differing levels of fibrosis, including two models of fatty liver disease with emerging fibrosis. The data demonstrate a high concordance between human and rodent hepatic kinome signaling that focalizes, as shown by our network analysis of detrimental pathways.Our findings establish a comprehensive kinase atlas for liver fibrosis, which identifies analogous signaling events conserved among humans and rodents.

Details

ISSN :
15273350 and 02709139
Volume :
76
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hepatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d64ac9e52f717413e99715100e1a652f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/hep.32467