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  • Insulin resistance dysregulates CYP7B1 leading to oxysterol accumulation: a pathway for NAFL to NASH transition.

Insulin resistance dysregulates CYP7B1 leading to oxysterol accumulation: a pathway for NAFL to NASH transition.

Journal of lipid research (2020-10-04)
Genta Kakiyama, Dalila Marques, Rebecca Martin, Hajime Takei, Daniel Rodriguez-Agudo, Sandra A LaSalle, Taishi Hashiguchi, Xiaoying Liu, Richard Green, Sandra Erickson, Gregorio Gil, Michael Fuchs, Mitsuyoshi Suzuki, Tsuyoshi Murai, Hiroshi Nittono, Phillip B Hylemon, Huiping Zhou, William M Pandak
ABSTRACT

NAFLD is an important public health issue closely associated with the pervasive epidemics of diabetes and obesity. Yet, despite NAFLD being among the most common of chronic liver diseases, the biological factors responsible for its transition from benign nonalcoholic fatty liver (NAFL) to NASH remain unclear. This lack of knowledge leads to a decreased ability to find relevant animal models, predict disease progression, or develop clinical treatments. In the current study, we used multiple mouse models of NAFLD, human correlation data, and selective gene overexpression of steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StarD1) in mice to elucidate a plausible mechanistic pathway for promoting the transition from NAFL to NASH. We show that oxysterol 7α-hydroxylase (CYP7B1) controls the levels of intracellular regulatory oxysterols generated by the "acidic/alternative" pathway of cholesterol metabolism. Specifically, we report data showing that an inability to upregulate CYP7B1, in the setting of insulin resistance, results in the accumulation of toxic intracellular cholesterol metabolites that promote inflammation and hepatocyte injury. This metabolic pathway, initiated and exacerbated by insulin resistance, offers insight into approaches for the treatment of NAFLD.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Choloylglycine Hydrolase from Clostridium perfringens (C. welchii), lyophilized powder, ≥100 units/mg protein
Sigma-Aldrich
Sulfatase from Helix pomatia, Type H-1, sulfatase ≥10,000 units/g solid