0000000000706841

AUTHOR

Diego F. Calvisi

showing 1 related works from this author

Fatty Liver and Fibrosis in Glycine N-Methyltransferase Knockout Mice Is Prevented by Nicotinamide

2010

Deletion of glycine N-methyltransferase (GNMT), the main gene involved in liver S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) catabolism, leads to the hepatic accumulation of this molecule and the development of fatty liver and fibrosis in mice. To demonstrate that the excess of hepatic SAM is the main agent contributing to liver disease in GNMT knockout (KO) mice, we treated 1.5-month-old GNMT-KO mice for 6 weeks with nicotinamide (NAM), a substrate of the enzyme NAM N-methyltransferase. NAM administration markedly reduced hepatic SAM content, prevented DNA hypermethylation, and normalized the expression of critical genes involved in fatty acid metabolism, oxidative stress, inflammation, cell proliferation, …

Liver CirrhosisNiacinamidemedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyS-AdenosylmethionineCirrhosisGene ExpressionGlycine N-MethyltransferaseBiologyArticleLiver diseasechemistry.chemical_compoundMiceFibrosisInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsRas signalingMice KnockoutDNA methylationHepatologyFatty acid metabolismFatty livermedicine.diseaseGlycine N-methyltransferaseFatty LiverEndocrinologyJAK/STAT signalingchemistryGNMThepatocytesHepatic fibrosisGene Deletion
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