Acetyl-CoA metabolism drives epigenome change and contributes to carcinogenesis risk in fatty liver disease.
Authors
Assante, Gabriella
Chandrasekaran, Sriram
Ng, Stanley
Tourna, Aikaterini
Chung, Carolina H
Isse, Kowsar A
Banks, Jasmine L
Soffientini, Ugo
Filippi, Celine
Dhawan, Anil
Liu, Mo
Rozen, Steven G
Campbell, Peter
Ballard, J William O
Turner, Nigel
Morris, Margaret J
Chokshi, Shilpa
Youngson, Neil A
Publication Date
2022-06-23Journal Title
Genome Med
ISSN
1756-994X
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Volume
14
Issue
1
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Assante, G., Chandrasekaran, S., Ng, S., Tourna, A., Chung, C. H., Isse, K. A., Banks, J. L., et al. (2022). Acetyl-CoA metabolism drives epigenome change and contributes to carcinogenesis risk in fatty liver disease.. Genome Med, 14 (1) https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-022-01071-5
Description
Funder: foundation for liver research; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000404
Funder: Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100001082
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The incidence of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)-associated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is increasing worldwide, but the steps in precancerous hepatocytes which lead to HCC driver mutations are not well understood. Here we provide evidence that metabolically driven histone hyperacetylation in steatotic hepatocytes can increase DNA damage to initiate carcinogenesis. METHODS: Global epigenetic state was assessed in liver samples from high-fat diet or high-fructose diet rodent models, as well as in cultured immortalized human hepatocytes (IHH cells). The mechanisms linking steatosis, histone acetylation and DNA damage were investigated by computational metabolic modelling as well as through manipulation of IHH cells with metabolic and epigenetic inhibitors. Chromatin immunoprecipitation and next-generation sequencing (ChIP-seq) and transcriptome (RNA-seq) analyses were performed on IHH cells. Mutation locations and patterns were compared between the IHH cell model and genome sequence data from preneoplastic fatty liver samples from patients with alcohol-related liver disease and NAFLD. RESULTS: Genome-wide histone acetylation was increased in steatotic livers of rodents fed high-fructose or high-fat diet. In vitro, steatosis relaxed chromatin and increased DNA damage marker γH2AX, which was reversed by inhibiting acetyl-CoA production. Steatosis-associated acetylation and γH2AX were enriched at gene clusters in telomere-proximal regions which contained HCC tumour suppressors in hepatocytes and human fatty livers. Regions of metabolically driven epigenetic change also had increased levels of DNA mutation in non-cancerous tissue from NAFLD and alcohol-related liver disease patients. Finally, genome-scale network modelling indicated that redox balance could be a key contributor to this mechanism. CONCLUSIONS: Abnormal histone hyperacetylation facilitates DNA damage in steatotic hepatocytes and is a potential initiating event in hepatocellular carcinogenesis.
Keywords
Research, Steatosis, Histone acetylation, Hepatocellular carcinoma, NAFLD, ARLD, Telomerase
Sponsorship
australian research council (DP190102555)
singapore ministry of health via the duke-nus signature research programmes (MOH-000032/MOH-CIRG18may-0004)
National Institute of Health (US) (R35 GM13779501)
CRUK-OHSU Project Award ((C52489/A29681))
CRUK Accelerator award to the HUNTER consortium ((C18873/A26813).)
Identifiers
s13073-022-01071-5, 1071
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-022-01071-5
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/338494
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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