Nesfatin-1 and nesfatin-1-like peptide attenuate hepatocyte lipid accumulation and nucleobindin-1 disruption modulates lipid metabolic pathways

Nesfatin-1 (NESF-1) has been shown to modulate lipid metabolism. We have identified a nesfatin-1-like-peptide (NLP) processed from a related precursor nucleobindin 1 (NUCB1). Here we determined if NLP, like NESF-1, regulates lipid accumulation in vitro, and tested if the disruption of nucb1 gene aff...

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Veröffentlicht in:Communications biology 2024-05, Vol.7 (1), p.623-13, Article 623
Hauptverfasser: Nasri, Atefeh, Kowaluk, Mateh, Widenmaier, Scott B., Unniappan, Suraj
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nesfatin-1 (NESF-1) has been shown to modulate lipid metabolism. We have identified a nesfatin-1-like-peptide (NLP) processed from a related precursor nucleobindin 1 (NUCB1). Here we determined if NLP, like NESF-1, regulates lipid accumulation in vitro, and tested if the disruption of nucb1 gene affects hepatic lipid metabolism genes in mice. Hepatocytes (HepG2/C3A cells) express NLP and NESF-1 and both peptides significantly reduced lipogenic enzyme mRNAs and enhanced beta-oxidation enzyme mRNAs. Lipid contents in oleic acid induced HepG2/C3A cells were attenuated by NESF-1 and NLP. The inhibitory effect on cellular lipid content was blocked by compound C, an inhibitor of AMPK. The disruption of nucb1 gene affected lipid metabolism-related enzyme mRNAs, endogenous nucb2 mRNA and AMPK phosphorylation. The lipid-lowering effects identified here highlights the potential of nucleobindins and peptides processed from them to address lipid disorders, and its possible benefits in metabolic disease management. Nesfatin-1 and nesfatin-1-like peptide reduced lipid content in oleic acid-induced HepG2/C3A cells, an effect that was blocked by an AMPK inhibitor compound C. This highlights the therapeutic potential for nesfatin-1 and NLP in lipid disorders.
ISSN:2399-3642
2399-3642
DOI:10.1038/s42003-024-06314-2