FABP4 Released from Steatotic Hepatocytes in Alcoholic Liver Disease Enhances Hepatic Tumor Progression

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R21 · $185,844 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

SUMMARY Alcohol use disorders (AUDs) are significant clinical and financial healthcare burdens in the United States and globally. Within the spectrum of pathologies affected by AUDs, the central role of the liver in alcohol metabolism makes it particularly susceptible to damage. Alcoholic liver disease (ALD) arises from sustained, heavy alcohol ingestion and is characterized by a series of worsening liver pathologies (fat accumulation (hepatosteatosis), alcoholic hepatitis, fibrosis-cirrhosis). In ALD, hepatic cytochrome P450 2E1 is induced to metabolize ethanol leading to elevated intrahepatic acetaldehyde and oxidative stress, factors that increase the risk of genetic damage and development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Intracellular lipid movement and storage are closely regulated processes required to maintain liver and systemic homeostasis. In healthy individuals fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) are expressed in a tissue- specific manner and function as critical chaperones during lipid sequestration and movement. In the healthy liver, FABP1 is the predominant FABP expressed in hepatocytes. Recent studies report FABP4 (an isoform usually expressed in adipocytes and macrophages) is synthesized and released by adipocytes to act as a paracrine- endocrine signaling molecule in specific disease states, including cancers arising in close proximity to adipose tissue. Studies by our group report FABP4 mRNA and protein expression is dramatically upregulated in hepatocytes isolated from alcohol-fed rodents, and following alcohol metabolism by CYP2E1-expressing HCC cells. These findings of increased FABP4 expression in ALD model systems are also evidenced in tissue and serum from ALD/ALD-HCC patients. Functionally, we report exogenous rhFABP4 stimulates ERK-MAPK and JNK signaling leading to HCC proliferation and migration in vitro. Collectively, these data have led us to hypothesize that “alcohol metabolism in ALD-induced steatotic hepatocytes leads to the induction of FABP4 synthesis and release which in turn stimulates HCC cell growth and migration”. Two Specific Aims are proposed; Aim 1 will determine the mechanism[s] by which hepatic alcohol metabolism induces FABP4 expression, and define the signaling mechanism[s] by which FABP4 regulates hepatoma cellfunction. To achieve this, we will combine knowledge derived from our Preliminary Data using established in vitro models with innovative proteomic approaches (Cell Signaling Phospho-Antibody Array) to accurately determine the signaling networks regulated by FABP4. Aim 2 will demonstrate the significance of FABP4 signaling in alcohol-dependent HCC expansion and progression in vivo. These studies will utilize a novel hepatocyte-specific FABP4-/- mouse (HS-FABP4-/-) and an orthotopic model of tumor progression. In parallel, we will expand our ongoing analyses of tissue and serum from ALD and ALD-HCC patients for FABP4 expression to determine the clinical relevance of altered FABP4 expression d...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10491369
Project number
5R21AA029241-02
Recipient
CAROLINAS MEDICAL CENTER
Principal Investigator
IAIN HUGH MCKILLOP
Activity code
R21
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$185,844
Award type
5
Project period
2021-09-25 → 2024-08-31