- Rao, Shuyun;
- Yang, Xiaochun;
- Ohshiro, Kazufumi;
- Zaidi, Sobia;
- Wang, Zhanhuai;
- Shetty, Kirti;
- Xiang, Xiyan;
- Hassan, Md;
- Mohammad, Taj;
- Latham, Patricia;
- Nguyen, Bao-Ngoc;
- Wong, Linda;
- Yu, Herbert;
- Al-Abed, Yousef;
- Mishra, Bibhuti;
- Vacca, Michele;
- Guenigault, Gareth;
- Allison, Michael;
- Vidal-Puig, Antonio;
- Benhammou, Jihane;
- Alvarez, Marcus;
- Pajukanta, Päivi;
- Pisegna, Joseph;
- Mishra, Lopa
The prevalence of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and liver cancer is increasing. De novo lipogenesis and fibrosis contribute to disease progression and cancerous transformation. Here, we found that β2-spectrin (SPTBN1) promotes sterol regulatory element (SRE)–binding protein (SREBP)–stimulated lipogenesis and development of liver cancer in mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD) or a western diet (WD). Either hepatocyte-specific knockout of SPTBN1 or siRNA-mediated therapy protected mice from HFD/WD-induced obesity and fibrosis, lipid accumulation, and tissue damage in the liver. Biochemical analysis suggested that HFD/WD induces SPTBN1 and SREBP1 cleavage by CASPASE-3 and that the cleaved products interact to promote expression of genes with sterol response elements. Analysis of human NASH tissue revealed increased SPTBN1 and CASPASE-3 expression. Thus, our data indicate that SPTBN1 represents a potential target for therapeutic intervention in NASH and liver cancer.