An animal model recapitulates human hepatic diseases associated with GATA6 mutations
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Shi, Wenpeng; Yi, Xiaogui; Ruan, Hua; Wang, Donglei; Wu, Dan; Jiang, Pengfei; Luo, Lisha; Ma, Xirui; Jiang, Faming; Li, Cairui; Wu, Weinan; Luo, Lingfei; Li, Li; Wang, Guixue; Qiu, Juhui; Huang, Honghui
署名单位:
Chongqing University; Southwest University - China; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Chongqing Institute of Green & Intelligent Technology, CAS; Dali University; Guangdong Medical University; Guangdong Medical University
刊物名称:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN/ISSBN:
0027-12271
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2317801121
发表日期:
2025-01-07
关键词:
gata6
liver
zebrafish
promoter
lrh-1
differentiation
specification
deletion
defects
synergy
摘要:
Heterozygotic GATA6 mutations are responsible for various congenital diseases in the heart, pancreas, liver, and other organs in humans. However, there is lack of an animal that can comprehensively model these diseases since GATA6 is essential for early embryogenesis. Here, we report the establishment of a gata6 knockout zebrafish which recapitulates most of the symptoms in patients with GATA6 mutations, including cardiac outflow tract defects, pancreatic hypoplasia/agenesis, gallbladder agenesis, and various liver diseases. Particularly in the liver, the zebrafish gata6 model exhibits the paucity of intrahepatic bile ducts, disrupted bile canaliculi, cholestasis, resembling the liver diseases associated with GATA6 mutations. Moreover, an unreported phenotype, hepatic cysts, has been also revealed in the model. Mechanistically, Gata6 interacts with Hhex and binds lrh-1 promoter to synergistically activate its expression, thereby enhancing the Lrh-1- mediated (3- catenin signaling which is essential for liver development. This transcriptional activation of lrh-1 is tightly controlled by the negative feedback, in which Lrh1 interacts with Gata6 to weaken its transactivation ability. Moreover, Gata6 level is regulated by Hhex- mediated proteasomal degradation. The orchestration by these three transcription factors precisely modulates Gata6 activity, ensuring (3- catenin signaling output and proper liver development in zebrafish. Importantly, the molecular mechanism identified in zebrafish is conserved in human cells. GATA6 mutant variants associated with hepatobiliary malformations in humans interact aberrantly with HHEX, resulting in subsequent impairments of LRH-1 activation. Conclusively, the disease model established here provides both phenotypic and mechanism insights into the human hepatic diseases associated with GATA6 mutations.