4.7 Article

Regulation on Citrate Influx and Metabolism through Inhibiting SLC13A5 and ACLY: A Novel Mechanism Mediating the Therapeutic Effects of Curcumin on NAFLD

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 69, Issue 31, Pages 8714-8725

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.1c03105

Keywords

NAFLD; de novo lipid synthesis; citrate; SLC13A5; ACLY; curcumin

Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2632019ZD02]
  2. Double First-Class University project [CPU2018GF07]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20191323]

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The study shows that curcumin can improve lipid accumulation in NAFLD by modulating the citrate pathway and functionally inhibiting SLC13A5 and ACLY, effectively reducing hepatic lipid deposition.
Upregulated de novo lipogenesis (DNL) plays a pivotal role in the progress of the nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Cytoplasmic citrate flux, mediated by plasma membrane citrate transporter (SLC13A5), mitochondrial citrate carrier (SLC25A1), and ATP-dependent citrate lyase (ACLY), determines the central carbon source for acetyl-CoA required in DNL. Curcumin, a widely accepted dietary polyphenol, can attenuate lipid accumulation in NAFLD. Here, we first investigated the lipidlowering effect of curcumin against NAFLD in oleic and palmitic acid (OPA)-induced primary mouse hepatocytes and high-fat plus high-fructose diet (HFHFD)-induced mice. Curcumin profoundly attenuated OPA- or HFHFD-induced hyperlipidemia and aberrant hepatic lipid deposition via modulating the expression and function of SLC13A5 and ACLY. The possible mechanism of curcumin on the citrate pathway was investigated using HepG2 cells, HEK293T cells transfected with human SLC13A5, and recombinant human ACLY. In OPA-stimulated HepG2 cells, curcumin rectified the dysregulated expression of SLC13A5/ACLY possibly via the AMPK-mTOR signaling pathway. Besides, curcumin also functionally inhibited both citrate transport and metabolism mediated by SLC13A5 and ACLY, respectively. These findings confirm that curcumin improves the lipid accumulation in the liver by blocking citrate disposition and hence may be used to prevent NAFLD.

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