Journal of Lipid Research (May 2012)

Regulation of skeletal muscle lipolysis and oxidative metabolism by the co-lipase CGI-58

  • Pierre-Marie Badin,
  • Camille Loubière,
  • Maarten Coonen,
  • Katie Louche,
  • Geneviève Tavernier,
  • Virginie Bourlier,
  • Aline Mairal,
  • Arild C. Rustan,
  • Steven R. Smith,
  • Dominique Langin,
  • Cedric Moro

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53, no. 5
pp. 839 – 848

Abstract

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We investigated here the specific role of CGI-58 in the regulation of energy metabolism in skeletal muscle. We first examined CGI-58 protein expression in various muscle types in mice, and next modulated CGI-58 expression during overexpression and knockdown studies in human primary myotubes and evaluated the consequences on oxidative metabolism. We observed a preferential expression of CGI-58 in oxidative muscles in mice consistent with triacylglycerol hydrolase activity. We next showed by pulse-chase that CGI-58 overexpression increased by more than 2-fold the rate of triacylglycerol (TAG) hydrolysis, as well as TAG-derived fatty acid (FA) release and oxidation. Oppositely, CGI-58 silencing reduced TAG hydrolysis and TAG-derived FA release and oxidation (−77%, P < 0.001), whereas it increased glucose oxidation and glycogen synthesis. Interestingly, modulations of CGI-58 expression and FA release are reflected by changes in pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 gene expression. This regulation involves the activation of the peroxisome proliferator activating receptor-δ (PPARδ) by lipolysis products. Altogether, these data reveal that CGI-58 plays a limiting role in the control of oxidative metabolism by modulating FA availability and the expression of PPARδ-target genes, and highlight an important metabolic function of CGI-58 in skeletal muscle.

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