| Literature DB >> 35476518 |
Christina Priest1,2, Rohith T Nagari1,2, Lara Bideyan1,2, Stephen D Lee1,2, Alexander Nguyen1,2,3, Xu Xiao1,2, Peter Tontonoz1,2.
Abstract
Regulation of hepatocyte proliferation and liver morphology is of critical importance to tissue and whole-body homeostasis. However, the molecular mechanisms that underlie this complex process are incompletely understood. Here, we describe a role for the ubiquitin ligase BRCA1-associated protein (BRAP) in regulation of hepatocyte morphology and turnover via regulation of MST2, a protein kinase in the Hippo pathway. The Hippo pathway has been implicated in the control of liver morphology, inflammation, and fibrosis. We demonstrate here that liver-specific ablation of Brap in mice results in gross and cellular morphological alterations of the liver. Brap-deficient livers exhibit increased hepatocyte proliferation, cell death, and inflammation. We show that loss of BRAP protein alters Hippo pathway signaling, causing a reduction in phosphorylation of YAP and increased expression of YAP target genes, including those regulating cell growth and interactions with the extracellular environment. Finally, increased Hippo signaling in Brap knockout mice alters the pattern of liver lipid accumulation in dietary models of obesity. These studies identify a role for BRAP as a modulator of the hepatic Hippo pathway with relevance to human liver disease.Entities:
Keywords: Hippo pathway; liver; ubiquitin ligase
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35476518 PMCID: PMC9171358 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2201859119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779
Fig. 1.Characterization of Brap LKO mice. (A) Anti-Brap and anti-GAPDH Western blots of Brap LKO and WT mice. (B) Body weights of male Brap LKO mice and WT littermate flox/flox controls, from 6 wk to 35 wk, fed a chow diet. (C) Body weights of Brap LKO and WT mice at 6 wk. (D) Fat and lean mass of Brap LKO and WT mice at 6 wk. (E) Fat and lean mass of Brap LKO and WT mice at 10 wk. (F) Liver weights of Brap LKO and WT mice at 18 wk. (G and H) Gross appearance of male Brap LKO livers (G) and WT controls (H) at 18 wk. (I) Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) (Top) and trichrome (Bottom) staining of male Brap LKO and WT control livers at 18 wk. All images are representative of three replicate mice. Alb, albumin; *P < 0.005; ***P < 0.0005; ns, not significant.
Fig. 2.Analysis of Brap LKO mouse livers. (A and B) Serum aspartate transaminase (AST) and alanine transaminase (ALT) levels of Brap LKO mice and WT control mice. (C) Ploidy of primary hepatocytes from Brap LKO and WT mice. (D) Ki-67, cleaved caspase (Cleav. casp.) 3, and F4/80 staining of Brap LKO and WT mice livers. (E) Western blot for PCNA, P-H3, survivin, cleaved caspase 3, and actin in Brap LKO and WT mice. (F) Relative expression via qPCR of F4/80, TNF-α, and Mcp1 in Brap LKO and WT mice. ***P < 0.0005.
Fig. 3.RNA sequencing (RNAseq) of livers from Brap LKO and WT mice. (A) Heat map of 452 differentially up-regulated and 170 significantly differentially down-regulated genes in Brap LKO livers relative to WT livers. (B) Volcano plot of statistical significance against log2 fold-change of gene expression between WT and Brap LKO livers. (C) KEGG analysis of most significantly up-regulated pathways in Brap LKO livers. (D) qPCR validation of top RNAseq hits (n = 3 to 4). *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.0001. Alb, albumin; padj, adjusted P value.
Fig. 4.Alterations in Hippo pathway signaling in Brap LKO mice and characterization of Brap/Mst2 interaction. (A) Yap phosphorylation in livers of WT and Brap LKO mice. (B) Yap phosphorylation in HepG2 cells overexpressing Brap WT or an E3 ligase–deficient mutant BRAP (BrapCA). (C) Western blot of Hippo pathway proteins in WT and Brap LKO mice. (D) Relative expression via qPCR of Yap target genes in livers of WT and Brap LKO mice. (E) mRNA expression (from RNA-sequencing counts) of Hippo pathway genes. (F) Immunoprecipitation (IP) with anti-Mst2 antibody or IgG control of HEK293T cell lysates. (G) Immunoprecipitation with anti-Myc antibody of lysates from HEK239T cells transfected with Myc-Mst2 and either GFP or Flag-Brap. Alb, albumin. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.05; ***P < 0.0005.
Fig. 5.Brap LKO mice exhibit alterations in triglyceride accumulation upon pathological diet feeding. (A) Weights of Brap LKO and WT mice on a 14-wk high-fat, high-sucrose NASH diet. (B and C) Liver weights (B) and triglyceride content (C) of Brap LKO and WT mice after 16 wk of NASH-diet feeding. (D) H&E and trichrome staining of livers of Brap LKO and WT mice after 16 wk of NASH-diet feeding. (E) Weights of Brap LKO and WT mice fed a 10-wk Western diet. (F and G) Liver weight (F) and triglyceride (G) content of Brap LKO and WT mice after a 10-wk Western diet. (H) H&E-stained livers of Brap LKO and WT mice after 10 wk of Western diet feeding. Alb, albumin; ns, not significant; TG, triglyceride. *P < 0.05.