McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine affiliated faculty member George Michalopoulos, PhD, Professor and Chairman of the Department of Pathology at the University of Pittsburgh, received NIH funding to study the impact of inhibition of EGF receptor on non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. This proposal, which is funded for 5 years, will study an important role of EGFR signaling in the pathogenesis of NASH/NAFLD and has high translational impact. Other Pittsburgh Liver Research Center members supporting the study include Ramon Bataller, MD, PhD, and Aatur Singhi, MD, PhD.
An abstract of the project follows:
In the last two decades, there has been an increased appreciation of a long-term threat, that of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), evolving into non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), which can further advance into cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Treatment of NAFLD and NASH is primarily through attempts at nutritional modification, often unsuccessful due to poor compliance and socioeconomic factors. There is currently no accepted single-agent pharmacologic treatment for NAFLD. The current proposal is based on findings from our work on liver regeneration, in which we discovered a unique role for EGFR for control of steatosis in replicating hepatocytes. We have now extended these studies in mice fed a high fat diet supplemented with fructose in the drinking water (“Fast Food Diet”, FFD). We found that in mice on FFD, concurrent EGFR inhibition completely prevented and eliminated any fat deposition in hepatocytes. Furthermore, EGFR inhibition reversed severe hepatocyte steatosis established after FFD feeding for 4 months. Detail analysis of the mechanisms revealed widespread effects of EGFR inhibition on multiple transcription factors related to lipid metabolism and subsequent consequences to specific enzymes associated with lipid biosynthesis and degradation. No such findings occur when signaling from the other of the two hepatocyte-mitogenic receptor tyrosine kinases, MET (the HGF receptor), was eliminated. The purpose of this proposal is to explore translational applications of this finding. This will be done by exploring effects of EGFR inhibitors established in human pharmacology. In addition, we will conduct parallel analysis between EGFR and MET signaling inhibition on their effects of NAFLD, aiming to uncover specific pathways unique to EGFR that may reveal new pharmacologic approaches more focused than the inhibition of the entire EGFR signaling with its potentially adverse complications. In parallel studies, we will also use available human NAFLD/NASH tissue material available in the Biorepository of the Pittsburgh Liver Research Center (PLRC). This material will be used under the established rules of IRB obtained by PLRC for such studies. We will explore activation of EGFR dependent pathways and will correlate with the histology of NAFLD/NASH. A serious complication of progression of NAFLD to NASH is development of fibrosis. We have uncovered EGFR-controlled signaling molecules in steatotic hepatocytes, which have been associated with activation of hepatic stellate cells and enhanced production of collagens. These also offer opportunities for selective pharmacology for fibrosis and their relevance will be assessed in the studies proposed.
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Pittsburgh Liver Research Center News Release