Abstract

Nonalcoholic fatty acid disease (NAFLD) is a common complication of obesity associated with liver fibrosis. The underlying molecular mechanisms involved in the progression from normal to fibrosis remain unclear. Liver tissues from the liver fibrosis model identified the USP33 gene as a key gene in NAFLD-associated fibrosis. USP33 knockdown inhibited hepatic stellate cell activation and glycolysis in gerbils with NAFLD-associated fibrosis. Conversely, overexpression of USP33 caused a contrast function on hepatic stellate cell activation and glycolysis activation, which was inhibited by c-Myc inhibitor 10058-F4. The copy number of short-chain fatty acids-producing bacterium Alistipes sp. AL-1, Mucispirillum schaedleri, Helicobacter hepaticus in the feces, and the total bile acid level in serum were higher in gerbils with NAFLD-associated fibrosis. Bile acid promoted USP33 expression and inhibiting its receptor reversed hepatic stellate cell activation in gerbils with NAFLD-associated fibrosis. These results suggest that the expression of USP33, an important deubiquitinating enzyme, is increased in NAFLD fibrosis. These data also point to hepatic stellate cells as a key cell type that may respond to liver fibrosis via USP33-induced cell activation and glycolysis.

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