Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), characterized by liver steatosis, inflammation and injury, has emerged as one of major causes for end-stage liver disease like hepatocellular carcinoma. However, what drives its progression?
Credit: Bing Zhou, Yunchen Luo, Nana Ji, Fei Mao, Liping Xiang, Hua Bian, Minghua Zheng, Cheng Hu, Yao Li, Yan Lu
Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), characterized by liver steatosis, inflammation and injury, has emerged as one of major causes for end-stage liver disease like hepatocellular carcinoma. However, what drives its progression?
More than twenty years ago, a ‘two-hit’ theory was proposed to explain NASH pathogenesis, which includes steatosis as a ‘first-hit’ and oxidative stress as a ‘second-hit’. Now, we know that this point is outdated. Our understanding of the molecular mechanisms of NASH remains limited, which severely dampens the development of therapeutic options.
Using three mouse models of diets or chemical compounds-induced chronic liver inflammation and injury, researchers from Zhongshan Hospital of Fudan University and Shanghai Jiao Tong University Affiliated Sixth People’s Hospital and other collaborators have worked together to identify a new molecular mechanism of NASH pathogenesis. This study entitled ‘Promotion of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis by RNA N6-methyladenosine reader IGF2BP2 in mice’ is published online in Life Metabolism on June 2022.
In this study, through unbiased RNA-sequencing analysis and subsequent validation, the researchers found that Insulin like growth factor 2 mRNA binding protein 2 (IGF2BP2), a novel N6-methyladenosine (m6A) modification reader, was significantly increased in the livers of NASH mice. The upregulation of IGF2BP2 was further confirmed in the liver samples from NASH patients, suggesting an important clinical relevance. To explore the biological function of IGF2BP2, multiple in vivo strategies were used, including adenovirus and adeno-associated virus-mediated overexpression, and adenovirus-mediated knockdown. The researchers obtained consistent results showing that IGF2BP2 overexpression could induce liver steatosis, hepatic inflammation and injury in healthy mice, whereas IGF2BP2 knockdown was efficient to improve NASH pathogenesis. In-depth analysis of molecular signatures demonstrated that inflammatory response and fibrosis-related genes, and a variety of chemokines and chemokine receptors, were dramatically upregulated by IGF2BP2. This gene expression pattern is very much similar to NASH patients. Moreover, the researchers also found that IGF2BP2 could induce hepatocyte death and neutrophil infiltration in the liver, which are two important features of human NASH. Finally, the researchers demonstrated the mechanisms of IGF2BP2 in NASH development. IGF2BP2 was shown to bind and stabilize the messenger RNA of TAB2, leading to the activation of downstream inflammatory signaling pathways like NF-kB and JNK, thereby inducing hepatic inflammation, injury and hepatocyte apoptosis.
Overall, this study established IGF2BP2 as a key regulator in the development and progression of NASH. Suppression of IGF2BP2 expression or activity may serve as a promising therapeutic target for treating NASH. Moreover, the researchers proposed that NASH could be rapidly and directly converted from healthy liver bypassing simple steatosis, in the absence of changes in body weight and systemic metabolic disorders. Metabolic dysfunction-independent steatohepatitis (MISH) was for the first time posited in this study, although further intensive work is still warranted.
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Reference: Bing Zhou et al. (2022). Promotion of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis by RNA N 6-methyladenosine reader IGF2BP2 in mice. Life Metabolism. https://doi.org/10.1093/lifemeta/loac006
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Life Metabolism is a fully open access, peer-reviewed journal that publishes one volume per year online, providing a platform for the publication of works of high significance and broad interest in all areas of metabolism. Life Metabolism welcomes several different article types, including original article, review article, research highlight, letter, editorial, perspective, and so on. Once a paper is accepted, Life Metabolism can publish a precopyedited, preproofed version of the paper online within 48 hours of receiving a signed licence, and this will be replaced by a copyedited, proofed version of the paper as soon as it is ready. The Editors-in-Chief are professors Peng Li at Tsinghua University and John R Speakman at University of Aberdeen, UK.
Journal
Life Metabolism
DOI
10.1093/lifemeta/loac006
Method of Research
Experimental study
Subject of Research
Animal tissue samples
Article Title
Promotion of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis by RNA N 6-methyladenosine reader IGF2BP2 in mice
Article Publication Date
10-Jun-2022