13 research outputs found

    Liver X receptors connect nuclear O-GlcNAc signaling to hepatic glucose utilization and lipogenesis

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    Insulin is a central regulator of glycolysis and de novo lipogenesis in the liver. However, hepatic glucose metabolism has been shown to activate the transcription of glycolytic and lipogenenic enzymes independently of insulin.  The nuclear liver X receptors LXRa and LXRb play a major role in glucose and lipid metabolism, regulating transcription of glycolytic and lipogenic enzymes in liver, which is believed to be mediated by oxysterol ligand activation and insulin signaling. The majority of hepatic glucose-responsive genes are regulated by carbohydrate response element-binding protein (ChREBP), a transcriptional regulator that requires glucose metabolism via the hexosamine biosynthetic pathway and O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT)-mediated O-GlcNAc modification for full activation. We have previously shown that also LXRs are targets for O-GlcNAc modification in response to glucose and refeeding, promoting lipogenic gene expression. We recently addressed the relative roles of insulin, glucose and LXR in regulating hepatic glycolytic and lipogenic gene expression in vivo by subjecting untreated control and streptozotocin (STZ)-treated LXRa/b+/+ and LXRa/b-/- mice to a fasting-refeeding regime. STZ was used to destroy pancreatic β-cells and insulin production. We found that under hyperglycemic and hypoinsulinemic conditions, LXRs maintained their ability to upregulate the expression of glycolytic and lipogenic enzymes, including glucokinase (GK), sterol regulatory element-binding protein (SREBP-1c), ChREBPa and the newly identified shorter isoform ChREBPb. ChREBPa expression became dependent on LXR under hyperglycemic and hypoinsulinemic conditions, which was mediated, at least in part, by OGT signaling. Moreover, we found that LXR and OGT interacted and co-localized in the nucleus in Huh7 cells and that loss of LXRs profoundly reduced nuclear O-GlcNAc signaling, ChREBP O-GlcNAcylation and activity in vivo. We propose that LXR regulation of nuclear O-GlcNAc signaling and ChREBP O-GlcNAcylation is part of a mechanism linking hepatic glucose utilization with lipid synthesis

    Serglycin is part of the secretory repertoire of LPS-activated monocytes

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    Monocytes play multiple roles in the immune system, and are active in both acute and chronic diseases. Patients exposed to bacterial infections depend on monocytes in defense reactions, but excessive immune reactions may also cause morbidity through systemic inflammatory responses. Few studies have addressed the importance of proteoglycans, and in particular, the hematopoietic serglycin, in such monocyte immune reactions. Adherent primary monocytes were cultured in absence and presence of LPS. Media were analyzed by ELISA for detection of serglycin. Lysed cell fractions were used to determine the mRNA level of serglycin. Monocytes were also cultured on chamber slides to investigate if serglycin could be detected intracellularly by immunocytochemistry. Monocytes secreted serglycin, and LPS-stimulation increased the secretion. Secretion of inflammatory cytokines increased to a larger extent than serglycin. mRNA levels of serglycin were also increased, suggesting both increased expression and secretion. Immunocytochemistry revealed the presence of serglycin in intracellular vesicles, many destined for secretion. Serglycin containing vesicles increased in number and size when the cells were exposed to LPS. Intracellular vesicle localization and secretion of the proteoglycan serglycin is shown for the first time in primary human monocytes. Monocyte activation by LPS increased the expression and secretion of serglycin, suggesting roles for serglycin in inflammatory processes

    OGT (O-GlcNAC transferase) selectively modifies multiple residues unique to Lamin A

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    The LMNA gene encodes lamins A and C with key roles in nuclear structure, signaling, gene regulation, and genome integrity. Mutations in LMNA cause over 12 diseases (‘laminopathies’). Lamins A and C are identical for their first 566 residues. However, they form separate filaments in vivo, with apparently distinct roles. We report that lamin A is β-O-linked N-acetylglucosamine-(O-GlcNAc)-modified in human hepatoma (Huh7) cells and in mouse liver. In vitro assays with purified O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT) enzyme showed robust O-GlcNAcylation of recombinant mature lamin A tails (residues 385–646), with no detectable modification of lamin B1, lamin C, or ‘progerin’ (Δ50) tails. Using mass spectrometry, we identified 11 O-GlcNAc sites in a ‘sweet spot’ unique to lamin A, with up to seven sugars per peptide. Most sites were unpredicted by current algorithms. Double-mutant (S612A/T643A) lamin A tails were still robustly O-GlcNAc-modified at seven sites. By contrast, O-GlcNAcylation was undetectable on tails bearing deletion Δ50, which causes Hutchinson–Gilford progeria syndrome, and greatly reduced by deletion Δ35. We conclude that residues deleted in progeria are required for substrate recognition and/or modification by OGT in vitro. Interestingly, deletion Δ35, which does not remove the majority of identified O-GlcNAc sites, does remove potential OGT-association motifs (lamin A residues 622–625 and 639–645) homologous to that in mouse Tet1. These biochemical results are significant because they identify a novel molecular pathway that may profoundly influence lamin A function. The hypothesis that lamin A is selectively regulated by OGT warrants future testing in vivo, along with two predictions: genetic variants may contribute to disease by perturbing OGT-dependent regulation, and nutrient or other stresses might cause OGT to misregulate wildtype lamin A

    LXRα Regulates ChREBPα Transactivity in a Target Gene-Specific Manner through an Agonist-Modulated LBD-LID Interaction

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    The cholesterol-sensing nuclear receptor liver X receptor (LXR) and the glucose-sensing transcription factor carbohydrate responsive element-binding protein (ChREBP) are central players in regulating glucose and lipid metabolism in the liver. More knowledge of their mechanistic interplay is needed to understand their role in pathological conditions like fatty liver disease and insulin resistance. In the current study, LXR and ChREBP co-occupancy was examined by analyzing ChIP-seq datasets from mice livers. LXR and ChREBP interaction was determined by Co-immunoprecipitation (CoIP) and their transactivity was assessed by real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) of target genes and gene reporter assays. Chromatin binding capacity was determined by ChIP-qPCR assays. Our data show that LXRα and ChREBPα interact physically and show a high co-occupancy at regulatory regions in the mouse genome. LXRα co-activates ChREBPα and regulates ChREBP-specific target genes in vitro and in vivo. This co-activation is dependent on functional recognition elements for ChREBP but not for LXR, indicating that ChREBPα recruits LXRα to chromatin in trans. The two factors interact via their key activation domains; the low glucose inhibitory domain (LID) of ChREBPα and the ligand-binding domain (LBD) of LXRα. While unliganded LXRα co-activates ChREBPα, ligand-bound LXRα surprisingly represses ChREBPα activity on ChREBP-specific target genes. Mechanistically, this is due to a destabilized LXRα:ChREBPα interaction, leading to reduced ChREBP-binding to chromatin and restricted activation of glycolytic and lipogenic target genes. This ligand-driven molecular switch highlights an unappreciated role of LXRα in responding to nutritional cues that was overlooked due to LXR lipogenesis-promoting function

    Nuclear Receptor Liver X Receptor Is O-GlcNAc-modified in Response to Glucose*

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    Post-translational modification of nucleocytoplasmic proteins by O-linked β-N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) has for the last 25 years emerged as an essential glucose-sensing mechanism. The liver X receptors (LXRs) function as nutritional sensors for cholesterol-regulating lipid metabolism, glucose homeostasis, and inflammation. LXRs are shown to be post-translationally modified by phosphorylation, acetylation, and sumoylation, affecting their target gene specificity, stability, and transactivating and transrepressional activity, respectively. In the present study, we show for the first time that LXRα and LXRβ are targets for glucose-hexosamine-derived O-GlcNAc modification in human Huh7 cells. Furthermore, we observed increased hepatic LXRα O-GlcNAcylation in vivo in refed mice and in streptozotocin-induced refed diabetic mice. Importantly, induction of LXRα O-GlcNAcylation in both mouse models was concomitant with increased expression of the lipogenic gene SREBP-1c (sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1c). Furthermore, glucose increased LXR/retinoic acid receptor-dependent activation of luciferase reporter activity driven by the mouse SREBP-1c promoter via the hexosamine biosynthetic pathway in Huh7 cells. Altogether, our results suggest that O-GlcNAcylation of LXR is a novel mechanism by which LXR acts as a glucose sensor affecting LXR-dependent gene expression, substantiating the crucial role of LXR as a nutritional sensor in lipid and glucose metabolism
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