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Hepatic E4BP4 induction promotes lipid accumulation by suppressing AMPK signaling in response to chemical or diet-induced ER stress.

Citation
Yang, M., et al. “Hepatic E4Bp4 Induction Promotes Lipid Accumulation By Suppressing Ampk Signaling In Response To Chemical Or Diet-Induced Er Stress.”. Faseb Journal : Official Publication Of The Federation Of American Societies For Experimental Biology, pp. 13533-13547.
Center University of Michigan
Author Meichan Yang, Deqiang Zhang, Zifeng Zhao, Julian Sit, Mischael Saint-Sume, Omar Shabandri, Kezhong Zhang, Lei Yin, Xin Tong
Keywords ER stress, De Novo Lipogenesis, high-fat, low-methionine, and choline-deficient diet, lipid accumulation, lipid droplet
Abstract

Prolonged ER stress has been known to be one of the major drivers of impaired lipid homeostasis during the pathogenesis of non-alcoholic liver disease (NAFLD). However, the downstream mediators of ER stress pathway in promoting lipid accumulation remain poorly understood. Here, we present data showing the b-ZIP transcription factor E4BP4 in both the hepatocytes and the mouse liver is potently induced by the chemical ER stress inducer tunicamycin or by high-fat, low-methionine, and choline-deficient (HFLMCD) diet. We showed that such an induction is partially dependent on CHOP, a known mediator of ER stress and requires the E-box element of the E4bp4 promoter. Tunicamycin promotes the lipid droplet formation and alters lipid metabolic gene expression in primary mouse hepatocytes from E4bp4 but not E4bp4 liver-specific KO (E4bp4-LKO) mice. Compared with E4bp4 mice, E4bp4-LKO female mice exhibit reduced liver lipid accumulation and partially improved liver function after 10-week HFLMCD diet feeding. Mechanistically, we observed elevated AMPK activity and the AMPKβ1 abundance in the liver of E4bp4-LKO mice. We have evidence supporting that E4BP4 may suppress the AMPK activity via promoting the AMPKβ1 ubiquitination and degradation. Furthermore, acute depletion of the Ampkβ1 subunit restores lipid droplet formation in E4bp4-LKO primary mouse hepatocytes. Our study highlighted hepatic E4BP4 as a key factor linking ER stress and lipid accumulation in the liver. Targeting E4BP4 in the liver may be a novel therapeutic avenue for treating NAFLD.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
Volume
34
Issue
10
Number of Pages
13533-13547
Date Published
10/2020
ISSN Number
1530-6860
DOI
10.1096/fj.201903292RR
Alternate Journal
FASEB J
PMID
32780887
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