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Lysine tRNA fragments and miR-194-5p co-regulate hepatic steatosis via beta-Klotho and Perilipin 2

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Abstract

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) involves hepatic accumulation of intracellular lipid droplets via incompletely understood processes. Here, we report distinct and cooperative NAFLD roles of LysTTT-5'tRF transfer RNA fragments and microRNA miR-194-5p. Unlike lean animals, dietary-induced NAFLD mice showed hepatic co-declined LysTTT-5'tRF and miR-194-5p levels, restored following hepatic steatosis-suppressing miR-132 antisense oligonucleotide treatment. Moreover, exposing human-derived Hep G2 cells to oleic acid for 7 days co-suppressed miR-194-5p and LysTTT-5'tRF levels while increasing lipid accumulation. Importantly, transfecting fattened cells with a synthetic LysTTT-5'tRF mimic elevated the metabolic regulator beta-Klotho mRNA levels while declining triglyceride amounts by 30% within 24 hours. In contradistinction, antisense suppression of miR-194-5p induced accumulation of its novel target, the NAFLD-implicated lipid droplet-coating PLIN2 protein. Further, two out of 15 steatosis-alleviating screened drug repurposing compounds, Danazol and Latanoprost elevated miR-194-5p or LysTTT-5'tRF levels. The different yet complementary roles of miR-194-5p and LysTTT-5'tRF offer new insights into the complex roles of small non-coding RNAs and the multiple pathways involved in NAFLD pathogenesis.

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