Abstract

Upon chronic damage to the liver, multiple cytokines stimulate hepatic stellate cells (HSCs), causing the alterations of gene expression profiles and thus leading to HSC activation, a key step in liver fibrogenesis. Activated HSCs are the dominant contributors to liver fibrosis. Bromodomain containing protein 4 (BrD4), an important epigenetic reader, was demonstrated to concentrate on hundreds of enhancers associated with genes involved in multiple profibrotic pathways, thereby directing HSC activation and the fibrotic responses. The present studies were designed to examine the effect of transforming growth factor beta-1 (TGFβ1), the most potent pro-fibrotic cytokine, on BrD4 expression in HSCs and, if so, elucidated the underlying mechanisms in vitro and in vivo. The experiments employed the heterogeneous TGFβ1 knockout (TGFβ1+/- ) mice, gene knockdown in vivo, and a model of thioacetamide (TAA)-induced liver injury. The results revealed that TGFβ1 enhanced BrD4 expression in HSCs, which was mediated, at least, by Smad3 signaling and early-immediate gene Egr1 (early growth response-1). TGFβ1-induced Smad3 signaling increased Egr1 expression and promoted Egr1 binding to BrD4 promoter at a site around -111 bp, promoting BrD4 expression. Egr1 knockdown reduced BrD4 expression in HSCs in a mouse model of TAA-induced liver injury and lessened liver fibrosis. Double fluorescence staining demonstrated a strong increase in BrD4 expression in activated HSCs in fibrotic areas of the human livers, paralleling the upregulation of p-Smad3 and Egr1. This research suggested novel molecular events underlying the roles of the master pro-fibrotic cytokine TGFβ1 in HSC activation and liver fibrogenesis.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call