z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Loss of heat shock factor 1 promotes hepatic stellate cell activation and drives liver fibrosis
Author(s) -
Choudhury Asmita,
Ratna Anuradha,
Lim Arlene,
Sebastian Rebecca M.,
Moore Christopher L.,
Filliol Aveline A.,
Bledsoe Jacob,
Dai Chengkai,
Schwabe Robert F.,
Shoulders Matthew D.,
Mandrekar Pranoti
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
hepatology communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2471-254X
DOI - 10.1002/hep4.2058
Subject(s) - hsf1 , hepatic stellate cell , heat shock , cancer research , fibrosis , biology , cirrhosis , microbiology and biotechnology , hepatic fibrosis , heat shock protein , medicine , endocrinology , hsp70 , biochemistry , gene
Abstract Liver fibrosis is an aberrant wound healing response that results from chronic injury and is mediated by hepatocellular death and activation of hepatic stellate cells (HSCs). While induction of oxidative stress is well established in fibrotic livers, there is limited information on stress‐mediated mechanisms of HSC activation. Cellular stress triggers an adaptive defense mechanism via master protein homeostasis regulator, heat shock factor 1 (HSF1), which induces heat shock proteins to respond to proteotoxic stress. Although the importance of HSF1 in restoring cellular homeostasis is well‐established, its potential role in liver fibrosis is unknown. Here, we show that HSF1 messenger RNA is induced in human cirrhotic and murine fibrotic livers. Hepatocytes exhibit nuclear HSF1, whereas stellate cells expressing alpha smooth muscle actin do not express nuclear HSF1 in human cirrhosis. Interestingly, despite nuclear HSF1, murine fibrotic livers did not show induction of HSF1 DNA binding activity compared with controls. HSF1‐deficient mice exhibit augmented HSC activation and fibrosis despite limited pro‐inflammatory cytokine response and display delayed fibrosis resolution. Stellate cell and hepatocyte‐specific HSF1 knockout mice exhibit higher induction of profibrogenic response, suggesting an important role for HSF1 in HSC activation and fibrosis. Stable expression of dominant negative HSF1 promotes fibrogenic activation of HSCs. Overactivation of HSF1 decreased phosphorylation of JNK and prevented HSC activation, supporting a protective role for HSF1. Our findings identify an unconventional role for HSF1 in liver fibrosis. Conclusion : Our results show that deficiency of HSF1 is associated with exacerbated HSC activation promoting liver fibrosis, whereas activation of HSF1 prevents profibrogenic HSC activation.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here