Journal of Lipid Research (Jul 2010)

Protein kinase Cbeta mediates hepatic induction of sterol-regulatory element binding protein-1c by insulin

  • Takashi Yamamoto,
  • Kazuhisa Watanabe,
  • Noriyuki Inoue,
  • Yoshimi Nakagawa,
  • Naomi Ishigaki,
  • Takashi Matsuzaka,
  • Yoshinori Takeuchi,
  • Kazuto Kobayashi,
  • Shigeru Yatoh,
  • Akimitsu Takahashi,
  • Hiroaki Suzuki,
  • Naoya Yahagi,
  • Takanari Gotoda,
  • Nobuhiro Yamada,
  • Hitoshi Shimano

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51, no. 7
pp. 1859 – 1870

Abstract

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Sterol-regulatory element binding protein-1c (SREBP-1c) is a transcription factor that controls lipogenesis in the liver. Hepatic SREBP-1c is nutritionally regulated, and its sustained activation causes hepatic steatosis and insulin resistance. Although regulation of SREBP-1c is known to occur at the transcriptional level, the precise mechanism by which insulin signaling activates SREBP-1c promoter remains to be elucidated. Here we show that protein kinase C beta (PKCbeta) is a key mediator of insulin-mediated activation of hepatic SREBP-1c and its target lipogenic genes. Activation of SREBP-1c in the liver of refed mice was suppressed by either adenoviral RNAi-mediated knockdown or dietary administration of a specific inhibitor of protein kinase C beta. The effect of PKCbeta inhibition was cancelled in insulin depletion by streptozotocin (STZ) treatment of mice. Promoter analysis indicated that PKCbeta activates SREBP-1c promoter through replacement of Sp3 by Sp1 for binding to the GC box in the sterol regulatory element (SRE) complex, a key cis-element of SREBP-1c promoter. Knockdown of Sp proteins demonstrated that Sp3 and Sp1 play reciprocally negative and positive roles in nutritional regulation of SREBP-1c, respectively. This new understanding of PKCbeta involvement in nutritional regulation of SREBP-1c activation provides a new aspect of PKCbeta inhibition as a potential therapeutic target for diabetic complications.

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