Background
Adiponectin has antisteatosis–anti-inflammatory properties and its circulating levels are reduced in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis
(NASH).
Methods
To assess the role of adiponectin in NASH, we measured expression of adiponectin gene (APM1) and receptors (AdipoR1/AdipoR2) in liver and subcutaneous and visceral fat in subjects with biopsy-proven NASH or pure steatosis (PS). In 103 subjects undergoing
gastric bypass or elective abdominal surgery (17 with normal liver histology (C), 52 with PS, and 34 with NASH), RNA was extracted
from tissue samples, and quantification of APM1, AdipoR1, and AdipoR2 was carried out by real-time polymerase chain reaction.
Results
In NASH vs C, circulating adiponectin levels (3.6[2.4] vs 5.3[4.3] μg/ml, median[interquartile range], p < 0.05) and adiponectin concentrations, APM1, AdipoR1, and AdipoR2 expression in visceral fat were all reduced (p ≤ 0.03). These differences disappeared when adjusting for obesity. In contrast, liver AdipoR1 (1.40 [0.46] vs 1.00 [0.32] of controls) and AdipoR2 expression (1.20 [0.41] vs 0.78 [0.43]) were increased in NASH, and group differences were statistically significant (p < 0.0001 for AdipoR1 and p = 0.0001 for AdipoR2). Results for PS were generally intermediate between NASH and C. Liver receptor expression was reciprocally related to circulating
adiponectin (rho = −0.42, p < 0.003 for AdipoR1 and rho = −0.26, p < 0.009 for AdipoR2). In multivariate models adjusting for sex, age, fasting plasma glucose, and obesity, liver enzymes levels were directly
related to both AdipoR1 and AdipoR2 expression in liver.
Conclusion
In obese patients with NASH, adiponectin receptors are underexpressed in visceral fat—as a likely correlate of obesity—but
overexpressed in liver, possibly as a compensatory response to hypoadiponectinemia, and positively associated with liver damage.
Keywords Adiponectin - Adiponectin receptors - Obesity - Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis