Molecular mechanism of intracellular lipid accumulation: Suppressive effect of PycnogenolR in liver cells

Authors

  • Shoichiro Ikuyama Department of Metabolism, Hematology and Rheumatic Diseases (DMHRDs), Kyushu University Beppu Hospital, Beppu 874-0838
  • Bin Fan Department of Metabolism, Hematology and Rheumatic Diseases (DMHRDs), Kyushu University Beppu Hospital, Beppu 874-0838
  • Jian-Qiu Gu Department of Metabolism, Hematology and Rheumatic Diseases (DMHRDs), Kyushu University Beppu Hospital, Beppu 874-0838
  • Kumiko Mukae Department of Metabolism, Hematology and Rheumatic Diseases (DMHRDs), Kyushu University Beppu Hospital, Beppu 874-0838
  • Hideyuki Watanabe Department of Metabolism, Hematology and Rheumatic Diseases (DMHRDs), Kyushu University Beppu Hospital, Beppu 874-0838

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31989/ffhd.v3i9.40

Abstract

Cells are physiologically ready to accumulate lipids such as triacylglycerides in the cytoplasm. Five classes of perilipin (PLIN) family proteins are known to be involved in the process of intracellular lipid accumulation. PLIN2 is expressed ubiquitously including adipocytes, hepatocytes and macrophages. Over-expression of PLIN2 is demonstrated in the lesions of fatty liver diseases and atherosclerosis. Suppression of PLIN2 expression prevents from developing these pathological conditions in animal models, suggesting that PLIN2 could be a therapeutic target molecule for excessive intracellular lipid accumulation which leads to various metabolic derangements. The PLIN2 gene promoter has two important cis-acting elements in close proximity:AP-1 element which mediates inflammatory signals and PPRE which mediates free fatty acid effect. In NMuLi mouse liver cells, FFA such as oleic acid requires both functional AP-1 and PPRE simultaneously to stimulate the promoter activity, indicating the presence of intimate interaction of inflammatory and metabolic signals on this gene. PycnogenolR, French maritime pine bark extracts, suppressed the oleic acid-induced PLIN2 expression and lipid accumulation in NMuLi cells. We found that PycnogenolR did not suppress the PLIN2 promoter activity or AP-1 binding to DNA. Instead, PycnogenolR facilitates the PLIN2 mRNA degradation, leading to suppression of lipid accumulation. This effect seems to be independent of antioxidant effect of PycnogenolR. We raise the idea that PLIN2 is a putative target molecule for prevention of pathological condition induced by excessive lipid accumulation, and this class of natural compounds could be putative therapeutic modalities.

Key words: PycnogenolR, lipid droplet, perilipin, fatty liver disease

Published

2013-09-30

Issue

Section

Review Articles