View : 597 Download: 0

Association between circulating bile acid alterations and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis independent of obesity and diabetes mellitus

Title
Association between circulating bile acid alterations and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis independent of obesity and diabetes mellitus
Authors
Jung, YoungaeKoo, Bo KyungJang, Seo YoungKim, DainLee, HeeyeonLee, Dong HyeonJoo, Sae KyungJung, Yong JinPark, Jeong HwanYoo, TaekyeongChoi, MurimLee, Min KyungKang, Sang WonChang, Mee SooKim, WonHwang, Geum-Sook|Innovative Target Exploration
Ewha Authors
황금숙
SCOPUS Author ID
황금숙scopus
Issue Date
2021
Journal Title
LIVER INTERNATIONAL
ISSN
1478-3223JCR Link

1478-3231JCR Link
Citation
LIVER INTERNATIONAL vol. 41, no. 12, pp. 2892 - 2902
Keywords
aqueous metabolitesbile acidfibrosisnonalcoholic steatohepatitisnonobese
Publisher
WILEY
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Background and Aims Bile acid (BA) dysregulation is related to not only metabolic diseases but also nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). We investigated whether circulating BA levels are altered according to the histological severity of NAFLD independent of metabolic derangements. Methods Global metabolic profiling and targeted BA analysis using sera collected from biopsy-proven no-NAFLD (n = 67), nonalcoholic fatty liver (NAFL) (n = 99), and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH, n = 75) subjects were performed sequentially. Circulating metabolome analysis integrated with the hepatic transcriptome was performed to elucidate the mechanistic basis of altered circulating BA profiles after stratification by obesity (body mass index <= 25 kg/m(2)). Circulating BA alterations were also validated in an independent validation cohort (29 no-NAFLD, 70 NAFL and 37 NASH). Results Global profiling analysis showed that BA was the metabolite significantly altered in NASH compared to NAFL. Targeted BA analysis demonstrated that glyco-/tauro-conjugated primary BAs were commonly increased in nonobese and obese NASH, while unconjugated primary BAs increased only in nonobese NASH. These characteristic primary BA level changes were maintained even after stratification according to diabetes status and were replicated in the independent validation cohort. Compared to nonobese NAFL patients, nonobese NASH patients exhibited upregulated hepatic expression of CYP8B1. Conclusions BA metabolism is dysregulated as the histological severity of NAFLD worsens, independent of obesity and diabetes status; dysregulation is more prominent in nonobese NAFLD patients. Metabolome-driven omics approach provides new insight into our understanding of altered BA metabolism associated with individual phenotypes of NAFLD.
DOI
10.1111/liv.15030
Appears in Collections:
자연과학대학 > 화학·나노과학전공 > Journal papers
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML


qrcode

BROWSE