Author:
Fleet Tiffany,Zhang Bin,Lin Fumin,Zhu Bokai,Dasgupta Subhamoy,Stashi Erin,Tackett Bryan,Thevananther Sundararajah,Rajapakshe Kimal I.,Gonzales Naomi,Dean Adam,Mao Jianqiang,Timchenko Nikolai,Malovannaya Anna,Qin Jun,Coarfa Cristian,DeMayo Francesco,Dacso Clifford C.,Foulds Charles E.,O’Malley Bert W.,York Brian
Abstract
Despite extensive efforts to understand the monogenic contributions to perturbed glucose homeostasis, the complexity of genetic events that fractionally contribute to the spectrum of this pathology remain poorly understood. Proper maintenance of glucose homeostasis is the central feature of a constellation of comorbidities that define the metabolic syndrome. The ability of the liver to balance carbohydrate uptake and release during the feeding-to-fasting transition is essential to the regulation of peripheral glucose availability. The liver coordinates the expression of gene programs that control glucose absorption, storage, and secretion. Herein, we demonstrate that Steroid Receptor Coactivator 2 (SRC-2) orchestrates a hierarchy of nutritionally responsive transcriptional complexes to precisely modulate plasma glucose availability. Using DNA pull-down technology coupled with mass spectrometry, we have identified SRC-2 as an indispensable integrator of transcriptional complexes that control the rate-limiting steps of hepatic glucose release and accretion. Collectively, these findings position SRC-2 as a major regulator of polygenic inputs to metabolic gene regulation and perhaps identify a previously unappreciated model that helps to explain the clinical spectrum of glucose dysregulation.
Funder
Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas
HHS | NIH | National Cancer Institute
HHS | NIH | National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Susan G. Komen for the Cure
Welch Foundation
Adrienne Helis Malvin Medical Research Foundation
Center for the Advancement of Science in Space
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
14 articles.
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