4.6 Review

Translational Control in Liver Disease

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2021.795298

Keywords

translation; RNA-binding proteins; CPEB proteins; liver disease; portal hypertension

Categories

Funding

  1. FEDER/Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [SAF2017-87988-R, PRE2018-083718, PID2020-118937RB-I00]
  2. Spanish Association Against Cancer [GCB15152955MEND]
  3. Worldwide Cancer Research Foundation [20_0284]
  4. World Cancer Research Fund International [IIG_FULL_2020_021]
  5. BBVA Foundation [28/2019]
  6. La Caixa Foundation [HR18-00302]
  7. La Marato TV3 Foundation [2019-0259]
  8. CERCA Programme (Catalan Government)
  9. [PID2020-118937RB-I00 MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100 011033]

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Chronic liver disease is a major threat to public health globally, with obesity and aging population being the main drivers of its increasing incidence. Liver transplantation remains the only curative treatment, but is hindered by high costs and organ scarcity. Therefore, new strategies are urgently needed to prevent and reverse chronic liver disease.
Chronic liver disease is one of the biggest threats to public health worldwide. Worryingly, the incidence of liver disease is dramatically rising due to the aging of the population and the global epidemics of obesity. Both are major risk factors for chronic liver disease and adverse prognostic factors, causing an increase in mortality rate. It is of great concern that 80-95% of obese people have non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, the major precursor for liver failure and a global health challenge. Currently, the only curative treatment for advanced chronic liver disease is liver transplantation, which is, however, hampered by high treatment costs and the scarcity of donor organs. New strategies are therefore urgently needed to prevent and reverse chronic liver disease. And for that it is essential to understand better the molecular mechanisms underlying human disease. This review focuses on the abnormalities in the regulation of translation by RNA-binding proteins during chronic liver disease and their pathological impact on portal hypertension, fibrosis, steatosis, neovascularization, and cancer development.

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