Chen_2025_J.Clin.Invest_135_

Reference

Title : Human genetics of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease: from variants to cause to precision treatment - Chen_2025_J.Clin.Invest_135_
Author(s) : Chen VL , Kuppa A , Oliveri A , Chen Y , Ponnandy P , Patel PB , Palmer ND , Speliotes EK
Ref : J Clinical Investigation , 135 : , 2025
Abstract :

Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is characterized by increased hepatic steatosis with cardiometabolic disease and is a leading cause of advanced liver disease. We review here the genetic basis of MASLD. The genetic variants most consistently associated with hepatic steatosis implicate genes involved in lipoprotein input or output, glucose metabolism, adiposity/fat distribution, insulin resistance, or mitochondrial/ER biology. The distinct mechanisms by which these variants promote hepatic steatosis result in distinct effects on cardiometabolic disease that may be best suited to precision medicine. Recent work on gene-environment interactions has shown that genetic risk is not fixed and may be exacerbated or attenuated by modifiable (diet, exercise, alcohol intake) and nonmodifiable environmental risk factors. Some steatosis-associated variants, notably those in patatin-like phospholipase domain-containing 3 (PNPLA3) and transmembrane 6 superfamily member 2 (TM6SF2), are associated with risk of developing adverse liver-related outcomes and provide information beyond clinical risk stratification tools, especially in individuals at intermediate to high risk for disease. Future work to better characterize disease heterogeneity by combining genetics with clinical risk factors to holistically predict risk and develop therapies based on genetic risk is required.

PubMedSearch : Chen_2025_J.Clin.Invest_135_
PubMedID: 40166930

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Citations formats

Chen VL, Kuppa A, Oliveri A, Chen Y, Ponnandy P, Patel PB, Palmer ND, Speliotes EK (2025)
Human genetics of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease: from variants to cause to precision treatment
J Clinical Investigation 135 :

Chen VL, Kuppa A, Oliveri A, Chen Y, Ponnandy P, Patel PB, Palmer ND, Speliotes EK (2025)
J Clinical Investigation 135 :