Molecular Metabolism (Jul 2022)

Hmgcs2-mediated ketogenesis modulates high-fat diet-induced hepatosteatosis

  • Shaza Asif,
  • Ri Youn Kim,
  • Thet Fatica,
  • Jordan Sim,
  • Xiaoling Zhao,
  • Yena Oh,
  • Alix Denoncourt,
  • Angela C. Cheung,
  • Michael Downey,
  • Erin E. Mulvihill,
  • Kyoung-Han Kim

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 61
p. 101494

Abstract

Read online

Objective: Aberrant ketogenesis is correlated with the degree of steatosis in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) patients, and an inborn error of ketogenesis (mitochondrial HMG-CoA synthase deficiency) is commonly associated with the development of the fatty liver. Here we aimed to determine the impact of Hmgcs2-mediated ketogenesis and its modulations on the development and treatment of fatty liver disease. Methods: Loss- and gain-of-ketogenic function models, achieved by Hmgcs2 knockout and overexpression, respectively, were utilized to investigate the role of ketogenesis in the hepatic lipid accumulation during postnatal development and in a high-fat diet-induced NAFLD mouse model. Results: Ketogenic function was decreased in NAFLD mice with a reduction in Hmgcs2 expression. Mice lacking Hmgcs2 developed spontaneous fatty liver phenotype during postnatal development, which was rescued by a shift to a low-fat dietary composition via early weaning. Hmgcs2 heterozygous adult mice, which exhibited lower ketogenic activity, were more susceptible to diet-induced NAFLD development, whereas HMGCS2 overexpression in NAFLD mice improved hepatosteatosis and glucose homeostasis. Conclusions: Our study adds new knowledge to the field of ketone body metabolism and shows that Hmgcs2-mediated ketogenesis modulates hepatic lipid regulation under a fat-enriched nutritional environment. The regulation of hepatic ketogenesis may be a viable therapeutic strategy in the prevention and treatment of hepatosteatosis.

Keywords