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System analysis of cross-talk between nuclear receptors reveals an opposite regulation of the cell cycle by LXR and FXR in human HepaRG liver cells

Transcriptional regulations exert a critical control of metabolic homeostasis. In particular, the nuclear receptors (NRs) are involved in regulating numerous pathways of the intermediate metabolism. The purpose of the present study was to explore in liver cells the interconnectedness between three o...

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Autores principales: Wigger, Leonore, Casals-Casas, Cristina, Baruchet, Michaël, Trang, Khanh B., Pradervand, Sylvain, Naldi, Aurélien, Desvergne, Béatrice
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6705839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31437187
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220894
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author Wigger, Leonore
Casals-Casas, Cristina
Baruchet, Michaël
Trang, Khanh B.
Pradervand, Sylvain
Naldi, Aurélien
Desvergne, Béatrice
author_facet Wigger, Leonore
Casals-Casas, Cristina
Baruchet, Michaël
Trang, Khanh B.
Pradervand, Sylvain
Naldi, Aurélien
Desvergne, Béatrice
author_sort Wigger, Leonore
collection PubMed
description Transcriptional regulations exert a critical control of metabolic homeostasis. In particular, the nuclear receptors (NRs) are involved in regulating numerous pathways of the intermediate metabolism. The purpose of the present study was to explore in liver cells the interconnectedness between three of them, LXR, FXR, and PPARα, all three known to act on lipid and glucose metabolism, and also on inflammation. The human cell line HepaRG was selected for its best proximity to human primary hepatocytes. Global gene expression of differentiated HepaRG cells was assessed after 4 hours and 24 hours of exposure to GW3965 (LXR agonist), GW7647 (PPARα agonist), and GW4064 and CDCA (FXR synthetic and natural agonist, respectively). Our work revealed that, contrary to our expectations, NR specificity is largely present at the level of target genes, with a smaller than expected overlap of the set of genes targeted by the different NRs. It also highlighted the much broader activity of the synthetic FXR ligand compared to CDCA. More importantly, our results revealed that activation of FXR has a pro-proliferative effect and decreases the number of tetraploid (or binucleated) hepatocytes, while LXR inhibits the cell cycle progression, inducing hepatocyte differentiation and an increase in tetraploidism. Conclusion: these results highlight the importance of analyzing the different NR activities in a context allowing a direct confrontation of each receptor outcome, and reveals the opposite role of FXR and LXR in hepatocyte cells division and maturation.
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spelling pubmed-67058392019-09-04 System analysis of cross-talk between nuclear receptors reveals an opposite regulation of the cell cycle by LXR and FXR in human HepaRG liver cells Wigger, Leonore Casals-Casas, Cristina Baruchet, Michaël Trang, Khanh B. Pradervand, Sylvain Naldi, Aurélien Desvergne, Béatrice PLoS One Research Article Transcriptional regulations exert a critical control of metabolic homeostasis. In particular, the nuclear receptors (NRs) are involved in regulating numerous pathways of the intermediate metabolism. The purpose of the present study was to explore in liver cells the interconnectedness between three of them, LXR, FXR, and PPARα, all three known to act on lipid and glucose metabolism, and also on inflammation. The human cell line HepaRG was selected for its best proximity to human primary hepatocytes. Global gene expression of differentiated HepaRG cells was assessed after 4 hours and 24 hours of exposure to GW3965 (LXR agonist), GW7647 (PPARα agonist), and GW4064 and CDCA (FXR synthetic and natural agonist, respectively). Our work revealed that, contrary to our expectations, NR specificity is largely present at the level of target genes, with a smaller than expected overlap of the set of genes targeted by the different NRs. It also highlighted the much broader activity of the synthetic FXR ligand compared to CDCA. More importantly, our results revealed that activation of FXR has a pro-proliferative effect and decreases the number of tetraploid (or binucleated) hepatocytes, while LXR inhibits the cell cycle progression, inducing hepatocyte differentiation and an increase in tetraploidism. Conclusion: these results highlight the importance of analyzing the different NR activities in a context allowing a direct confrontation of each receptor outcome, and reveals the opposite role of FXR and LXR in hepatocyte cells division and maturation. Public Library of Science 2019-08-22 /pmc/articles/PMC6705839/ /pubmed/31437187 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220894 Text en © 2019 Wigger et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wigger, Leonore
Casals-Casas, Cristina
Baruchet, Michaël
Trang, Khanh B.
Pradervand, Sylvain
Naldi, Aurélien
Desvergne, Béatrice
System analysis of cross-talk between nuclear receptors reveals an opposite regulation of the cell cycle by LXR and FXR in human HepaRG liver cells
title System analysis of cross-talk between nuclear receptors reveals an opposite regulation of the cell cycle by LXR and FXR in human HepaRG liver cells
title_full System analysis of cross-talk between nuclear receptors reveals an opposite regulation of the cell cycle by LXR and FXR in human HepaRG liver cells
title_fullStr System analysis of cross-talk between nuclear receptors reveals an opposite regulation of the cell cycle by LXR and FXR in human HepaRG liver cells
title_full_unstemmed System analysis of cross-talk between nuclear receptors reveals an opposite regulation of the cell cycle by LXR and FXR in human HepaRG liver cells
title_short System analysis of cross-talk between nuclear receptors reveals an opposite regulation of the cell cycle by LXR and FXR in human HepaRG liver cells
title_sort system analysis of cross-talk between nuclear receptors reveals an opposite regulation of the cell cycle by lxr and fxr in human heparg liver cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6705839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31437187
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220894
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