4.6 Article

Osteocalcin and Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: Lessons From Two Population-Based Cohorts and Animal Models

Journal

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 712-728

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jbmr.4227

Keywords

OSTEOCALCIN; NAFLD; BONE– LIVER INTERACTION; SREBP‐ 1C; HEPATIC DE NOVO LIPOGENESIS

Funding

  1. Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project [2017SHZDZX01]
  2. National Key Research Program of China [2017YFC1309800, 2017YFC1309801]
  3. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality [16JC1400500]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81873660]
  5. Shanghai Pujiang Talent Program [20PJ1402300]
  6. Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Commission Foundation [16411954800]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study reveals an inverse association between circulating osteocalcin levels and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), with osteocalcin reducing liver lipogenesis by decreasing SREBP-1c expression.
Osteocalcin regulates energy metabolism in an active undercarboxylated/uncarboxylated form. However, its role on the development of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is still controversial. In the current study, we investigated the causal relationship of circulating osteocalcin with NAFLD in two human cohorts and studied the effect of uncarboxylated osteocalcin on liver lipid metabolism through animal models. We analyzed the correlations of serum total/uncarboxylated osteocalcin with liver steatosis/fibrosis in a liver biopsy cohort of 196 participants, and the causal relationship between serum osteocalcin and the incidence/remission of NAFLD in a prospective community cohort of 2055 subjects from Shanghai Changfeng Study. Serum total osteocalcin was positively correlated with uncarboxylated osteocalcin (r = 0.528, p < .001). Total and uncarboxylated osteocalcin quartiles were inversely associated with liver steatosis, inflammation, ballooning, and fibrosis grades in both male and female participants (all p for trend <.05). After adjustment for confounding glucose, lipid, and bone metabolism parameters, the male and female participants with lowest quartile of osteocalcin still had more severe liver steatosis, with multivariate-adjusted odds ratios (ORs) of 7.25 (1.07-49.30) and 4.44 (1.01-19.41), respectively. In the prospective community cohort, after a median of 4.2-year follow-up, the female but not male participants with lowest quartile of osteocalcin at baseline had higher risk to develop NAFLD (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.90; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.14-3.16) and lower chance to achieve NAFLD remission (HR = 0.56; 95% CI 0.31-1.00). In wild-type mice fed a Western diet, osteocalcin treatment alleviated hepatic steatosis and reduced hepatic SREBP-1 and its downstream proteins expression. In mice treated with osteocalcin for a short term, hepatic SREBP-1 expression was decreased without changes of glucose level or insulin sensitivity. When SREBP-1c was stably expressed in a human SREBP-1c transgenic rat model, the reduction of lipogenesis induced by osteocalcin treatment was abolished. In conclusion, circulating osteocalcin was inversely associated with NAFLD. Osteocalcin reduces liver lipogenesis via decreasing SREBP-1c expression. (c) 2020 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR).

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