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Hepatic expression profiling identifies steatosis-independent and steatosis-driven advanced fibrosis genes
Divya Ramnath, Katharine M. Irvine, Samuel W. Lukowski, Leigh U. Horsfall, Zhixuan Loh, Andrew D. Clouston, Preya J. Patel, Kevin J. Fagan, Abishek Iyer, Guy Lampe, Jennifer L. Stow, Kate Schroder, David P. Fairlie, Joseph E. Powell, Elizabeth E. Powell, Matthew J. Sweet
Divya Ramnath, Katharine M. Irvine, Samuel W. Lukowski, Leigh U. Horsfall, Zhixuan Loh, Andrew D. Clouston, Preya J. Patel, Kevin J. Fagan, Abishek Iyer, Guy Lampe, Jennifer L. Stow, Kate Schroder, David P. Fairlie, Joseph E. Powell, Elizabeth E. Powell, Matthew J. Sweet
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Research Article Hepatology Inflammation

Hepatic expression profiling identifies steatosis-independent and steatosis-driven advanced fibrosis genes

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Abstract

Chronic liver disease (CLD) is associated with tissue-destructive fibrosis. Considering that common mechanisms drive fibrosis across etiologies, and that steatosis is an important cofactor for pathology, we performed RNA sequencing on liver biopsies of patients with different fibrosis stages, resulting from infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) (with or without steatosis) or fatty liver disease. In combination with enhanced liver fibrosis score correlation analysis, we reveal a common set of genes associated with advanced fibrosis, as exemplified by those encoding the transcription factor ETS-homologous factor (EHF) and the extracellular matrix protein versican (VCAN). We identified 17 fibrosis-associated genes as candidate EHF targets and demonstrated that EHF regulates multiple fibrosis-associated genes, including VCAN, in hepatic stellate cells. Serum VCAN levels were also elevated in advanced fibrosis patients. Comparing biopsies from patients with HCV with or without steatosis, we identified a steatosis-enriched gene set associated with advanced fibrosis, validating follistatin-like protein 1 (FSTL1) as an exemplar of this profile. In patients with advanced fibrosis, serum FSTL1 levels were elevated in those with steatosis (versus those without). Liver Fstl1 mRNA levels were also elevated in murine CLD models. We thus reveal a common gene signature for CLD-associated liver fibrosis and potential biomarkers and/or targets for steatosis-associated liver fibrosis.

Authors

Divya Ramnath, Katharine M. Irvine, Samuel W. Lukowski, Leigh U. Horsfall, Zhixuan Loh, Andrew D. Clouston, Preya J. Patel, Kevin J. Fagan, Abishek Iyer, Guy Lampe, Jennifer L. Stow, Kate Schroder, David P. Fairlie, Joseph E. Powell, Elizabeth E. Powell, Matthew J. Sweet

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Figure 6

Identification of steatosis-associated late-stage fibrosis genes.

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Identification of steatosis-associated late-stage fibrosis genes.
A volc...
A volcano plot illustrating significant differences in genes between early and advanced stages of fibrosis by RNA sequencing in patients with (A) HCV alone (n = 26 patients; EdgeR-generated FWER value and log2 fold change) and (B) HCV with steatosis (n = 29 patients; EdgeR-generated FWER value and log2 fold change). (C) A heatmap showing the average expression patterns of the 36 genes, identified as differentially expressed in the HCV and steatosis patient cohort, in the patients with either HCV alone or HCV and steatosis. (D) A bar graph of 12 steatosis-enriched late-stage fibrosis genes, showing fold change in expression between late- versus early-stage fibrosis in HCV patients (blue bars) and HCV with steatosis patients (red bars).

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