2 research outputs found

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

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    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 E4bp4flox/flox but not E4bp4 liver- specific KO (E4bp4- LKO) mice. Compared with E4bp4flox/flox 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 AMPKƎĀ²1 abundance in the liver of E4bp4- LKO mice. We have evidence supporting that E4BP4 may suppress the AMPK activity via promoting the AMPKƎĀ²1 ubiquitination and degradation. Furthermore, acute depletion of the AmpkƎĀ²1 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.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162728/3/fsb220918_am.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162728/2/fsb220918-sup-0001-FigS1-S10.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162728/1/fsb220918.pd
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