Song Li, Huang Shuo, Yan Honghao, Ma Qing, Luo Qihan, Qiu Jiang, Chen Minxia, Li Zongyuan, Jiang He, Chen Yufan, Chen Fangming, Du Yu, Fu Haozhe, Zhao Lisha, Zhao Kanglu, Qiu Ping
Tongde Hospital of Zhejiang Province affiliated to Zhejiang Chinese Medical University, Analysis and Testing Center, Zhejiang Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Hangzhou, China.
School of Basic Medical Sciences, Zhejiang Chinese Medical University, Hangzhou, China.
Front Pharmacol. 2024 Nov 21;15:1423031. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2024.1423031. eCollection 2024.
Alcoholic hepatitis is a severe inflammatory liver disease. In recent years, the incidence of AH has been on the rise, leading to an increasingly severe disease burden. Currently, there is a lack of specific biomarkers for the diagnosis and prognosis of AH in clinical practice. Therefore, the main objective of this study is to identify biomarkers closely associated with the progression of AH, to address the shortcomings in pathological diagnosis, and to identify potential therapeutic targets.
Bioinformatics and machine learning methods were used to comparatively study the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between AH patients and healthy individuals by analyzing four mRNA microarray data sets obtained from the GEO database. Subsequently, the role of potential biomarkers in AH and their mechanism of action were further confirmed by AH patients and and experiments.
Using differential analysis and WGCNA of the data set, a total of 167 key genes that may be related to AH were obtained. Among 167 genes, the LASSO logistic regression algorithm identified four potential biomarkers (KCNJ10, RPL21P23, ADRB2, and AC025279.1). Notably, ADRB2 showed biomarker potential in GSE28619, GSE94397, and E-MTAB-2664 datasets, and clinical liver samples. Furthermore, AH patients and experiments demonstrated ADRB2 inhibition and suppression of SIRT1/PPARα/PGC-1α signaling pathways, accompanied by elevated inflammatory factors and lipid deposition. experiments showed that ADRB2 overexpression mitigated the inhibition of the SIRT1/PPARα/PGC-1α signaling pathway, reversing the decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential, cell apoptosis, oxidative stress, and lipid deposition induced by alcohol exposure. Besides, the results also showed that ADRB2 expression in AH was negatively correlated with the levels of inflammatory factors (e.g., CCL2, CXCL8, and CXCL10).
This study points to ADRB2 as a promising biomarker with potential diagnostic and prognostic value in clinical cohort data. In addition, in AH patients, and experiments confirmed the key role of ADRB2 in the progression of AH. These findings suggest that ADRB2 may alleviate AH by activating the SIRT1/PPARα/PGC-1α pathway. This finding provides a new perspective for the diagnosis and treatment of AH.