Abstract
ZO-2 is a peripheral tight junction (TJ) protein whose silencing in renal epithelia induces cell hypertrophy. Here, we found that in ZO-2 KD MDCK cells, in compensatory renal hypertrophy triggered in rats by a unilateral nephrectomy and in liver steatosis of obese Zucker (OZ) rats, ZO-2 silencing is accompanied by the diminished activity of LATS, a kinase of the Hippo pathway, and the nuclear concentration of YAP, the final effector of this signaling route. ZO-2 appears to function as a scaffold for the Hippo pathway as it associates to LATS1. ZO-2 silencing in hypertrophic tissue is due to a diminished abundance of ZO-2 mRNA, and the Sp1 transcription factor is critical for ZO-2 transcription in renal cells. Treatment of OZ rats with metformin, an activator of AMPK that blocks JNK activity, augments ZO-2 and claudin-1 expression in the liver, reduces the paracellular permeability of hepatocytes, and serum bile acid content. Our results suggest that ZO-2 silencing is a common feature of hypertrophy, and that ZO-2 is a positive regulator of the Hippo pathway that regulates cell size. Moreover, our observations highlight the importance of AMPK, JNK, and ZO-2 as therapeutic targets for blood-bile barrier dysfunction.
Keywords:
Hippo pathway; Sp1; ZO-2; hypertrophy; liver steatosis; metformin.
MeSH terms
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AMP-Activated Protein Kinases* / metabolism
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Animals
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Fatty Liver*
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Hippo Signaling Pathway
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Hypertrophy
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Rats
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Rats, Zucker
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Tight Junction Proteins
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Zonula Occludens-2 Protein / metabolism*
Substances
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Tight Junction Proteins
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Tjp2 protein, rat
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Zonula Occludens-2 Protein
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AMP-Activated Protein Kinases
Grants and funding
This work was supported by the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología [FORDECYT-PRONACES-140644/2020]; Fundación Miguel Alemán, A.C. [2018]; SEP-CINVESTAV [FIDSC2018/33].