The E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase Trim31 alleviates non-alcoholic fatty liver disease by targeting Rhbdf2 in mouse hepatocytes

Minxuan Xu(Chongqing University), Jun Tan(Chongqing University of Education), Wei Dong(Shandong Tumor Hospital), Benkui Zou(Shandong Tumor Hospital), Xuepeng Teng(Shandong Tumor Hospital), Liancai Zhu(Chongqing University), Chenxu Ge(Chongqing University), Xianling Dai(Chongqing University), Qin Kuang(Chongqing University), Shaoyu Zhong(Chongqing University of Education), Lili Lai(Chongqing University of Education), Chao Yi(Chongqing University of Education), Tingting Tang(Chongqing University), Junjie Zhao(Chongqing University of Education), Longyan Wang(Chongqing University of Education), Jin Liu(Chongqing University of Education), Hao Wei(Chongqing University of Education), Yan Sun(Chongqing University), Qiufeng Yang(Chongqing University of Education), Qiang Li(Chongqing University of Education), Deshuai Lou(Chongqing University of Education), Linfeng Hu(Chongqing University), Xi Liu(Chongqing University of Education), Gang Kuang(Chongqing University of Education), Jing Luo(Chongqing University of Education), Mingxin Xiong(Chongqing University of Education), Jing Feng(Chongqing University), Chufeng Zhang(Shandong Tumor Hospital), Bochu Wang(Chongqing University)
Nature Communications
February 25, 2022
Cited by 50Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Systemic metabolic syndrome significantly increases the risk of morbidity and mortality in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). However, no effective therapeutic strategies are available, practically because our understanding of its complicated pathogenesis is poor. Here we identify the tripartite motif-containing protein 31 (Trim31) as an endogenous inhibitor of rhomboid 5 homolog 2 (Rhbdf2), and we further determine that Trim31 directly binds to Rhbdf2 and facilitates its proteasomal degradation. Hepatocyte-specific Trim31 ablation facilitates NAFLD-associated phenotypes in mice. Inversely, transgenic or ex vivo gene therapy-mediated Trim31 gain-of-function in mice with NAFLD phenotypes virtually alleviates severe deterioration and progression of steatohepatitis. The current findings suggest that Trim31 is an endogenous inhibitor of Rhbdf2 and downstream cascades in the pathogenic process of steatohepatitis and that it may serve as a feasible therapeutical target for the treatment of NAFLD/NASH and associated metabolic disorders.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis