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microRNA-27b regulates hepatic lipase enzyme LIPC and reduces triglyceride degradation during hepatitis C virus infection

Geneviève F. Desrochers, Roxana Filip, Micheal Bastianelli, Tiffany Stern, John Paul Pezacki

2022Journal of Biological Chemistry14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

miRNAs are short, noncoding RNAs that negatively and specifically regulate protein expression, the cumulative effects of which can result in broad changes to cell systems and architecture. The miRNA miR-27b is known to regulate lipid regulatory pathways in the human liver and is also induced by the hepatitis C virus (HCV). However, the functional targets of miR-27b are not well established. Herein, an activity-based protein profiling method using a serine hydrolase probe, coupled with stable isotope labeling and mass spectrometry identified direct and indirect targets of miR-27b. The hepatic lipase C (LIPC) stood out as both highly dependent on miR-27b and as a major modulator of lipid pathway misregulation. Modulation of miR-27b using both exogenous miRNA mimics and inhibitors demonstrated that transcription factors Jun, PPARα, and HNF4α, all of which also influence LIPC levels and activity, are regulated by miR-27b. LIPC was furthermore shown to affect the progress of the life cycle of HCV and to decrease levels of intracellular triglycerides, upon which HCV is known to depend. In summary, this work has demonstrated that miR-27b mediates HCV infection by downregulating LIPC, thereby reducing triglyceride degradation, which in turn increases cellular lipid levels.

Topics & Concepts

microRNALipid metabolismHepatitis C virusLipid dropletTriglycerideIntracellularAdipose triglyceride lipaseEnzymeChemistrySerineCell biologyBiologyFold changeMicroarrayMolecular biologyBiochemistryDownregulation and upregulationVirusLipaseGene expressionCholesterolGeneVirologyMicroRNA in disease regulationPeroxisome Proliferator-Activated ReceptorsAdipose Tissue and Metabolism