Journal of Lipid Research (Mar 2019)

Hepatic monoacylglycerol acyltransferase 1 is induced by prolonged food deprivation to modulate the hepatic fasting response[S]

  • Andrew J. Lutkewitte,
  • Kyle S. McCommis,
  • George G. Schweitzer,
  • Kari T. Chambers,
  • Mark J. Graham,
  • Lingjue Wang,
  • Gary J. Patti,
  • Angela M. Hall,
  • Brian N. Finck

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 60, no. 3
pp. 528 – 538

Abstract

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During prolonged fasting, the liver plays a central role in maintaining systemic energy homeostasis by producing glucose and ketones in processes fueled by oxidation of fatty acids liberated from adipose tissue. In mice, this is accompanied by transient hepatic accumulation of glycerolipids. We found that the hepatic expression of monoacylglycerol acyltransferase 1 (Mogat1), an enzyme with monoacylglycerol acyltransferase (MGAT) activity that produces diacyl­glycerol from monoacylglycerol, was significantly increased in the liver of fasted mice compared with mice given ad libitum access to food. Basal and fasting-induced expression of Mogat1 was markedly diminished in the liver of mice lacking the transcription factor PPARα. Suppressing Mogat1 expression in liver and adipose tissue with antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) reduced hepatic MGAT activity and triglyceride content compared with fasted controls. Surprisingly, the expression of many other PPARα target genes and PPARα activity was also decreased in mice given Mogat1 ASOs. When mice treated with control or Mogat1 ASOs were gavaged with the PPARα ligand, WY-14643, and then fasted for 18 h, WY-14643 administration reversed the effects of Mogat1 ASOs on PPARα target gene expression and liver triglyceride content. In conclusion, Mogat1 is a fasting-induced PPARα target gene that may feed forward to regulate liver PPARα activity during food deprivation.

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