Clinical and Molecular Hepatology (Jan 2024)

Protein-centric omics analysis reveals circulating complements linked to non-viral liver diseases as potential therapeutic targets

  • Yingzhou Shi,
  • Hang Dong,
  • Shiwei Sun,
  • Xiaoqin Wu,
  • Jiansong Fang,
  • Jianbo Zhao,
  • Junming Han,
  • Zongyue Li,
  • Huixiao Wu,
  • Luna Liu,
  • Wanhong Wu,
  • Yang Tian,
  • Guandou Yuan,
  • Xiude Fan,
  • Chao Xu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3350/cmh.2023.0343
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 1
pp. 80 – 97

Abstract

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Background/Aims To evaluate the causal correlation between complement components and non-viral liver diseases and their potential use as druggable targets. Methods We conducted Mendelian randomization (MR) to assess the causal role of circulating complements in the risk of non-viral liver diseases. A complement-centric protein interaction network was constructed to explore biological functions and identify potential therapeutic options. Results In the MR analysis, genetically predicted levels of complement C1q C chain (C1QC) were positively associated with the risk of autoimmune hepatitis (odds ratio 1.125, 95% confidence interval 1.018–1.244), while complement factor H-related protein 5 (CFHR5) was positively associated with the risk of primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC;1.193, 1.048– 1.357). On the other hand, CFHR1 (0.621, 0.497–0.776) and CFHR2 (0.824, 0.703–0.965) were inversely associated with the risk of alcohol-related cirrhosis. There were also significant inverse associations between C8 gamma chain (C8G) and PSC (0.832, 0.707–0.979), as well as the risk of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (1.167, 1.036–1.314). Additionally, C1S (0.111, 0.018–0.672), C7 (1.631, 1.190–2.236), and CFHR2 (1.279, 1.059–1.546) were significantly associated with the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma. Proteins from the complement regulatory networks and various liver diseaserelated proteins share common biological processes. Furthermore, potential therapeutic drugs for various liver diseases were identified through drug repurposing based on the complement regulatory network. Conclusions Our study suggests that certain complement components, including C1S, C1QC, CFHR1, CFHR2, CFHR5, C7, and C8G, might play a role in non-viral liver diseases and could be potential targets for drug development.

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