Spatial multi-omics characterizes GPR35-relevant lipid metabolism signatures across liver zonation in MASLD

Author:

Otkur Wuxiyar12,Zhang Yiran13,Li Yirong13,Bao Wenjun13,Feng Tingze13,Wu Bo1,Ma Yaolu13,Shi Jing14,Wang Li15,Pei Shaojun13,Wang Wen1,Wang Jixia1,Zhao Yaopeng1,Liu Yanfang1,Li Xiuling1,Xia Tian1,Wang Fangjun13,Chen Di13,Liang Xinmiao13,Piao Hai-long134

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Phytochemistry and Natural Medicines, Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Dalian, Liaoning 116023 , China

2. School of Life Science and Biopharmaceutics, Shenyang Pharmaceutical University , Shengyang, Liaoning 110016 , China

3. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100049 , China

4. Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, School of Life Sciences, China Medical University , Shenyang, Liaoning 110122 , China

5. Laboratory of High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry Technologies, Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Dalian, Liaoning 116023 , China

Abstract

Abstract Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is a metabolic disease that can progress to metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH), cirrhosis, and cancer. The zonal distribution of biomolecules in the liver is implicated in mediating the disease progression. Recently, G-protein-coupled receptor 35 (GPR35) has been highlighted to play a role in MASLD, but the precise mechanism is not fully understood, particularly, in a liver-zonal manner. Here, we aimed to identify spatially distributed specific genes and metabolites in different liver zonation that are regulated by GPR35 in MASLD, by combining lipid metabolomics, spatial transcriptomics (ST), and spatial metabolomics (SM). We found that GPR35 influenced lipid accumulation, inflammatory and metabolism-related factors in specific regions, notably affecting the anti-inflammation factor ELF4 (E74 like E-twenty six (ETS) transcription factor 4), lipid homeostasis key factor CIDEA (cell death-inducing DNA fragmentation factor alpha (DFFA)-like effector A), and the injury response-related genes SAA1/2/3 (serum amyloid A1/2/3), thereby impacting MASLD progression. Furthermore, SM elucidated specific metabolite distributions across different liver regions, such as C10H11N4O7P (3ʹ,5ʹ-cyclic inosine monophosphate (3ʹ,5ʹ-IMP)) for the central vein, and this metabolite significantly decreased in the liver zones of GPR35-deficient mice during MASLD progression. Taken together, GPR35 regulates hepatocyte damage repair, controls inflammation, and prevents MASLD progression by influencing phospholipid homeostasis and gene expression in a zonal manner.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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