Aljabban J, Rohr M, Syed S, Khorfan K, Borkowski V, Aljabban H, Segal M, Mukhtar M, Mohammed M, Panahiazar M, Hadley D, Spengler R, Spengler E. Transcriptome changes in stages of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. World J Hepatol 2022; 14(7): 1382-1397 [PMID: 36158924 DOI: 10.4254/wjh.v14.i7.1382]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Jihad Aljabban, MD, MSc, Academic Research, Doctor, Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics, 600 Highland Avenue, Madison, WI 53792, United States. jaljabban@uwhealth.org
Research Domain of This Article
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Article-Type of This Article
Clinical and Translational Research
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
World J Hepatol. Jul 27, 2022; 14(7): 1382-1397 Published online Jul 27, 2022. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v14.i7.1382
Table 1 Top canonical pathways for non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis identified by Ingenuity Pathway Analysis
Overlap
P value
Top canonical pathways in NAFLD vs healthy control
Liver X receptor / retinoid X receptor activation
5/121
4.35E-05
Superpathway of cholesterol biosynthesis
3/29
1.08E-04
Granulocyte adhesion and diapedesis
5/173
2.34E-04
CREB signaling
8/596
6.25E-04
Mevalonate pathway I
2/14
8.96E-04
Top canonical pathways in NASH vs healthy control
Cholesterol biosynthesis I
4/13
5.48E-05
Cholesterol Biosynthesis II (via 24,25-dihydrolanosterol)
4/13
5.48E-05
Cholesterol biosynthesis III (via desmosterol)
4/13
5.48E-05
IGF-1 signaling
9/106
9.16E-05
Superpathway of cholesterol biosynthesis
5/28
1.05E-04
Table 2 Summary of the list genes that are the most upregulated and downregulated in our meta-analysis of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis liver samples compared to healthy controls
Top upregulated genes
Top downregulated genes
NAFLD vs Healthy
NASH vs Healthy
NAFLD vs Healthy
NASH vs Healthy
XIST
0.326
Crystallin alpha A
1.185
LINC02535
-0.198
MT1L
-0.454
PEG10
0.267
CYP7A1
0.409
GPR88
-0.194
CYR61
-0.386
SUCO
0.252
BBOX1
0.381
CYP1A1
-0.170
FOSB
-0.339
CBWD5
0.239
TAF4B
0.355
IGFBP2
-0.168
IGFBP2
-0.326
TMEM154
0.228
FNDC5
0.346
P4HA1
-0.166
FOS
-0.275
HMGCR
0.225
MROH2A
0.293
TSPAN13
-0.159
CAPZA3
-0.254
LINC00885
0.216
Fc alpha and mu receptor
0.265
NR4A2
-0.148
CSRNP1
-0.254
Chitinase 3 Like 1
0.186
IL13RA2
0.252
PER3
-0.145
PCDHB19P
-0.252
MEP1B
0.181
ABHD1
0.250
SHBG
-0.135
Nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase
-0.240
Phosphodiesterase 11A
0.180
Muscular LMNA interacting protein
0.229
CENPO
-0.131
RASD1
-0.237
Table 3 Top disease functions for non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis identified by Ingenuity Pathway Analysis
Top disease functions in NAFLD vs healthy control
P values
Inflammatory response
1.67E-03
Liver lesion
6.59E-05
Cell movement of epithelial cells
3.88E-04
Activation of cells
5.30E-04
Synthesis of lipid
5.49E-08
Accumulation of lipid
6.12E-04
Concentration of lipid
2.38E-06
Fibrosis
3.75E-05
Secretion of lipid
1.06E-03
Hepatic injury
1.54E-04
Organismal injury and abnormalities
5.10E-16
Cancer
3.47E-15
Dermatologic diseases and conditions
5.20E-11
Metabolic disease
6.69E-10
Lipid metabolism
8.09E-12
Molecular transport
7.06E-12
Small molecule biochemistry
9.86E-11
Cell death and survival
5.05E-8
Cellular movement
6.28E-8
Adipogenesis
1.31E-7
Table 4 Top five molecular networks associated with genetic differences in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis liver biopsies compared to healthy controls. Disease networks were identified using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis
Top molecular networks in NAFLD vs healthy control
Lipid metabolism, small molecule biochemistry, vitamin and mineral metabolism
34
Cell-to-cell signaling and interaction, cellular movement, hematological system development and function
23
Connective tissue disorders, inflammatory disease, organismal injury and abnormalities
19
Cellular development, connective tissue development and function, skeletal and muscular system development and function
16
Cell death and survival, neurological disease, organismal injury and abnormalities
16
Amino acid metabolism, molecular transport, small molecule biochemistry
34
Cellular development, skeletal and muscular system development and function, tissue development
34
Hereditary disorder, neurological disease, organismal injury and abnormalities
32
Digestive system development and function, lipid metabolism, small molecule biochemistry
29
Cell cycle, cell death and survival, cellular movement
29
Citation: Aljabban J, Rohr M, Syed S, Khorfan K, Borkowski V, Aljabban H, Segal M, Mukhtar M, Mohammed M, Panahiazar M, Hadley D, Spengler R, Spengler E. Transcriptome changes in stages of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. World J Hepatol 2022; 14(7): 1382-1397