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Transcriptome-based repurposing of apigenin as a potential anti-fibrotic agent targeting hepatic stellate cells
Author(s) -
Daniel F. Hicks,
Nicolas Goossens,
Ana BlasGarcía,
Takuma Tsuchida,
Benjamin Wooden,
M. Christopher Wallace,
Natalia Nieto,
Abigale Lade,
Benjamin Redhead,
Arthur I. Cederbaum,
Joel T. Dudley,
Bryan C. Fuchs,
Youngmin A. Lee,
Yujin Hoshida,
Scott L. Friedman
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
scientific reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.24
H-Index - 213
ISSN - 2045-2322
DOI - 10.1038/srep42563
Subject(s) - hepatic stellate cell , apigenin , transcriptome , biology , fibrosis , cancer research , cirrhosis , liver injury , tumor necrosis factor alpha , gene expression , medicine , pharmacology , gene , immunology , pathology , biochemistry , flavonoid , antioxidant , endocrinology
We have used a computational approach to identify anti-fibrotic therapies by querying a transcriptome. A transcriptome signature of activated hepatic stellate cells (HSCs), the primary collagen-secreting cell in liver, and queried against a transcriptomic database that quantifies changes in gene expression in response to 1,309 FDA-approved drugs and bioactives (CMap). The flavonoid apigenin was among 9 top-ranked compounds predicted to have anti-fibrotic activity; indeed, apigenin dose-dependently reduced collagen I in the human HSC line, TWNT-4. To identify proteins mediating apigenin’s effect, we next overlapped a 122-gene signature unique to HSCs with a list of 160 genes encoding proteins that are known to interact with apigenin, which identified C1QTNF2 , encoding for Complement C1q tumor necrosis factor-related protein 2, a secreted adipocytokine with metabolic effects in liver. To validate its disease relevance, C1QTNF2 expression is reduced during hepatic stellate cell activation in culture and in a mouse model of alcoholic liver injury in vivo , and its expression correlates with better clinical outcomes in patients with hepatitis C cirrhosis (n = 216), suggesting it may have a protective role in cirrhosis progression.These findings reinforce the value of computational approaches to drug discovery for hepatic fibrosis, and identify C1QTNF2 as a potential mediator of apigenin’s anti-fibrotic activity.

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