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Relationship: 3104
Title
Increased, Expression of LXR activated genes leads to Synthesis, De Novo Fatty Acid (FA)
Upstream event
Downstream event
Key Event Relationship Overview
AOPs Referencing Relationship
| AOP Name | Adjacency | Weight of Evidence | Quantitative Understanding | Point of Contact | Author Status | OECD Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liver X Receptor (LXR) activation leads to liver steatosis | adjacent | High | Not Specified | John Frisch (send email) | Under development: Not open for comment. Do not cite |
Taxonomic Applicability
| Term | Scientific Term | Evidence | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vertebrates | Vertebrates | High | NCBI |
Sex Applicability
| Sex | Evidence |
|---|---|
| Unspecific | High |
Life Stage Applicability
| Term | Evidence |
|---|---|
| Adult | High |
| Juvenile | Moderate |
Key Event Relationship Description
Increased expression of genes activated by Liver X receptor (LXR) gene expression has been shown to lead to increased fatty acid synthesis pathway activity. Activated loci include: Sterol regulatory element-binding protein (SRBEP), Fas cell surface death receptor (FAS), stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (SCD1), and Carbohydrate response element binding protein (CHREBP). Elevation of these molecular components increase the rate of fatty acid synthesis.
Evidence Collection Strategy
This KER was identified as part of an Environmental Protection Agency effort to represent putative AOPs from peer-reviewed literature which were heretofore unrepresented in the AOP-Wiki. Support for this KER is referenced in publications cited in the originating work of Landesmann et al. (2012) and Negi et al. (2021).
Evidence Supporting this KER
Biological Plausibility
The biological plausibility linking increased expression of LXR activated genes to fatty acid synthesis is moderate. Gene expression studies in mammalian systems have linked increased expression of LXR activated genes and protein levels of Sterol regulatory element-binding protein (SRBEP), Fas cell surface death receptor (FAS), stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (SCD1), and Carbohydrate response element binding protein (CHREBP) to increased fatty acid synthesis.
Empirical Evidence
|
Species |
Duration |
Dose |
Activation LXR? |
Upregulation LXR activated genes? |
Summary |
Citation |
|
Human (Homo sapiens), lab mice (Mus musculus) |
Up to 7 days |
1 μM, 5 μM, and 10 uM T0901317, T0314407 (LXR agonists) for HEK293 cells, 5, 50 mg/kg bdwt T0901317 for mice |
Yes |
Yes |
Increased LXR gene expression vs control in HEK293 cells and C57BL/6 mice, with correlated increases in CYP7A1, SCD-1, and SREBP-1 gene expression in a dose-dependent manner. |
Schultz et al. (2000) |
|
Human (Homo sapiens), lab rat (Rattus norvegicus) |
96 hours |
0.3, 3, 30 nm Insulin plus 2 uM GW3965 (LXR agonist) |
Yes |
Yes |
Increased LXR gene expression vs control in human and rat cells, with correlated increases in SREBP-1c, FASN, SCD1 in a dose-dependent manner. |
Kotokorpi et al. (2007) |
Uncertainties and Inconsistencies
Known modulating factors
Quantitative Understanding of the Linkage
Response-response Relationship
Time-scale
Known Feedforward/Feedback loops influencing this KER
Domain of Applicability
Life Stage: All life stages with a liver. Older individuals are more likely to manifest this adverse outcome pathway (adults > juveniles) due to accumulation of triglycerides.
Sex: Applies to both males and females.
Taxonomic: Appears to be present broadly in vertebrates, with most representative studies in mammals (humans, lab mice, lab rats).
References
Kotokorpi, P., Ellis, E., Parini, P., Nilsson, L.-M., Strom, S., Steffensen, K.R., Gustafsson, J.-A., and Mode, A. 2007. Physiological Differences between Human and Rat Primary Hepatocytes in Response to Liver X Receptor Activation by 3-[3-[N-(2-Chloro-3-trifluoromethylbenzyl)-(2,2-diphenylethyl)amino]propyloxy]phenylacetic Acid Hydrochloride (GW3965). Molecular Pharmacology 72(4): 947-955.
Landesmann, B., Goumenou, M., Munn, S., and Whelan, M. 2012. Description of Prototype Modes-of-Action Related to Repeated Dose Toxicity. European Commission Report EUR 25631, 49 pages. https://op.europa.eu/en/publication-detail/-/publication/d2b09726-8267-42de-8093-8c8981201d65/language-en
Negi, C.K., Bajard, L., Kohoutek, J., and Blaha, L. 2021. An adverse outcome pathway based in vitro characterization of novel flame retardants-induced hepatic steatosis. Environmental Pollution 289: 117855.
Schultz, J.R., Tu, H., Luk, A., Repa, J.J., Medina, J.C., Li, L., Schwendner, S., Wang, S., Thoolen, M., Mangelsdorf, D.J., Lustig, K.D., and Shan, B. 2000. Role of LXRs in control of lipogenesis. Genes and Development 14:2831–2838.