Abstract

Involved in triglyceride (TG) and glycerophospholipid metabolism, the liver plays a crucial physiological role in the human body both as a major metabolic integrator and a central hub for lipid and energy homeostasis. Metabolic disorders can be caused by various factors that promote abnormal lipid accumulation in storage organelles called lipid droplets (LDs), as in hepatic steatosis, a metabolic syndrome manifestation that can progress to a hepatocellular carcinoma, the most common primary liver malignancy worldwide. Modern life involves conditions that disrupt the biological clock, causing metabolic disorders and higher cancer risk. A circadian clock is present in the liver and in immortalized cell lines and temporally regulates physiological processes by driving transcriptional and metabolic rhythms. Here we investigated metabolic rhythms in HepG2 cells, a human hepatocellular carcinoma-derived cell line, and the link between these rhythms and the circadian clock in control (Bmal1-wildtype) and Bmal1-disrupted (B-D) cells having their molecular clock impaired. Rhythms in the expression of lipid-synthesizing enzymes ChoKα, Pcyt2, and Lipin1, in the metabolism of particular glycerophospholipids such as phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine, and in the phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylethanolamine ratio and TG and LD content were observed in Bmal1-wildtype cells. By contrast, in the B-D model, the whole hepatic metabolism was severely altered with a significant reduction in the TG and LD content as well as in ChoKα and other related lipid enzymes. Together, our results suggest a very strong crosstalk between the molecular clock and lipid metabolism, which exhibits an exacerbated pathological condition in B-D cells.

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