Abstract

Metabolic dysfunction associated with fatty liver disease (MAFLD), always accompanied by disturbance of glucose and lipid metabolism, is becoming the most difficult obstacle in the next decades. In the current research, we uncover that the potent non-coding RNA Tug1, which is related to metabolic enzymes, regulates hepatocytes steatosis induced by sodium palmitate via miR-1934-3p absorbing. The knockdown of lncRNA-Tug1 distinctly rescues the increased expression level of glycolytic enzymes and fatty acid synthetase via releasing more mature miR-1934-3p in hepatocytes. Moreover, miR-1934-3p suppresses Selenoprotein F (SelenoF) through binding with the SelenoF 3'UTR effectors; importantly, we demonstrated that the deletion of SelenoF consistent with the lncRNA-Tug1's effecting on metabolism enzymes. In the current paper, the interaction of Tug1/miR-1934-3p/SelenoF was verified by the dual-luciferase reporter system, and IRS1/AKT pathway possesses the essential role in glucolipid metabolism when SelenoF is deleted. We concluded that lncRNA Tug1 functioned as ceRNA to alleviate steatosis and glycolysis in hepatocytes of C57BL/6 through adsorbing miR-1934-3p to release SelenoF and triggering IRS/AKT pathway. The Tug1/miR-1934-3p/SelenoF constructed the ceRNA interact network Selenoprotein F accelerates glucolipid metabolism via IRS1/AKT pathway SelenoF-/- alleviates steatosis in mice liver.

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