4.6 Article

Integrated Transcriptomic and Translatomic Inquiry of the Role of Betaine on Lipid Metabolic Dysregulation Induced by a High-Fat Diet

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NUTRITION
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2021.751436

Keywords

Ribo-seq; RNA-seq; betaine; translational efficiency; NAFLD

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFD0500402]
  2. Guangxi Science Foundation for Distinguished Young Scholars [2020GXNSFFA297008]
  3. Guangxi Science and Technology Base and Talents Project [AD18281085]
  4. Guangxi Natural Science Foundation [2019GXNSFDA245029]
  5. Guangxi Hundred-Talent Program, State Key Laboratory for Conservation and Utilization of Subtropical Agro-bioresources [SKLCUSA-a202006]
  6. Training Project of High-level Professional and Technical Talents of Guangxi University

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The study demonstrated that betaine alleviates hepatic lipid metabolic disorders induced by a high-fat diet by up-regulating fatty acid beta oxidation and lipid oxidation processes, reducing liver steatosis. Transcriptome and translatome analysis showed that betaine had a greater impact on NAFLD at the translational level, decreasing translational efficiency for genes related to lipid biosynthesis.
An excessive high-fat/energy diet is a major cause of obesity and linked complications, such as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Betaine has been shown to effectively improve hepatic lipid metabolism. However, the mechanistic basis for this improvement is largely unknown. Herein, integration of mRNA sequencing and ribosome footprints profiling (Ribo-seq) was used to investigate the means by which betaine alleviates liver lipid metabolic disorders induced by a high-fat diet. For the transcriptome, gene set enrichment analysis demonstrated betaine to reduce liver steatosis by up-regulation of fatty acid beta oxidation, lipid oxidation, and fatty acid catabolic processes. For the translatome, 574 differentially expressed genes were identified, 17 of which were associated with the NAFLD pathway. By combined analysis of transcriptome and translatome, we found that betaine had the greater effect on NAFLD at the translational level. Further, betaine decreased translational efficiency (TE) for IDI1, CYP51A1, TM7SF2, and APOA4, which are related to lipid biosynthesis. In summary, this study demonstrated betaine alleviating lipid metabolic dysfunction at the translational level. The transcriptome and translatome data integration approach used herein provides for a new understanding of the means by which to treat NAFLD.

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