Inhibition of polyploidization in Pten-deficient livers reduces steatosis

Publication date

2022-11

Authors

Moreno, EvaISNI 0000000492914781
Matondo, Augustine B
Bongiovanni, LauraORCID 0000-0001-8942-6048ISNI 0000000492840858
van de Lest, Chris H AORCID 0000-0003-2143-2825ISNI 0000000389810933
Molenaar, Martijn RISNI 0000000506828105
Toussaint, Mathilda J MISNI 0000000392130779
van Essen, Saskia CISNI 0000000512642024
Houweling, MartinISNI 0000000362997718
Helms, J. BerndISNI 0000000390424642
Westendorp, BartORCID 0000-0003-1043-3638ISNI 0000000396403121

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Article
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cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

The tumour suppressor PTEN is a negative regulator of the PI3K/AKT signalling pathway. Liver-specific deletion of Pten in mice results in the hyper-activation PI3K/AKT signalling accompanied by enhanced genome duplication (polyploidization), marked lipid accumulation (steatosis) and formation of hepatocellular carcinomas. However, it is unknown whether polyploidization in this model has an impact on the development of steatosis and the progression towards liver cancer. Here, we used a liver-specific conditional knockout approach to delete Pten in combination with deletion of E2f7/8, known key inducers of polyploidization. As expected, Pten deletion caused severe steatosis and liver tumours accompanied by enhanced polyploidization. Additional deletion of E2f7/8 inhibited polyploidization, alleviated Pten-induced steatosis without affecting lipid species composition and accelerated liver tumour progression. Global transcriptomic analysis showed that inhibition of polyploidization in Pten-deficient livers resulted in reduced expression of genes involved in energy metabolism, including PPAR-gamma signalling. However, we find no evidence that deregulated genes in Pten-deficient livers are direct transcriptional targets of E2F7/8, supporting that reduction in steatosis and progression towards liver cancer are likely consequences of inhibiting polyploidization. Lastly, flow cytometry and image analysis on isolated primary wildtype mouse hepatocytes provided further support that polyploid cells can accumulate more lipid droplets than diploid hepatocytes. Collectively, we show that polyploidization promotes steatosis and function as an important barrier against liver tumour progression in Pten-deficient livers.

Keywords

PTEN, atypical E2Fs, conditional knockout mice, hepatocellular carcinoma, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, polyploidization, steatosis, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Moreno, E, Matondo, A B, Bongiovanni, L, van de Lest, C H A, Molenaar, M R, Toussaint, M J M, van Essen, S C, Houweling, M, Helms, J B, Westendorp, B & de Bruin, A 2022, 'Inhibition of polyploidization in Pten-deficient livers reduces steatosis', Liver International, vol. 42, no. 11, pp. 2442-2452. https://doi.org/10.1111/liv.15384