Acute Deletion of the Glucocorticoid Receptor in Hepatocytes Disrupts Postprandial Lipid Metabolism in Male Mice

Author:

Correia Catarina Mendes1,Præstholm Stine Marie1,Havelund Jesper Foged1,Pedersen Felix Boel1,Siersbæk Majken Storm1,Ebbesen Morten Frendø2,Gerhart-Hines Zach3,Heeren Joerg4,Brewer Jonathan2,Larsen Steen5ORCID,Blagoev Blagoy1,Færgeman Nils Joakim1,Grøntved Lars1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Southern Denmark , 5230 Odense , Denmark

2. DaMBIC, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Southern Denmark , 5230 Odense , Denmark

3. Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research (CBMR), Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Copenhagen , 2200 Copenhagen , Denmark

4. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Cell Biology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf , Hamburg , Germany

5. Xlab, Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Copenhagen , 2200 Copenhagen , Denmark

Abstract

AbstractHepatic lipid metabolism is highly dynamic, and disruption of several circadian transcriptional regulators results in hepatic steatosis. This includes genetic disruption of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) as the liver develops. To address the functional role of GR in the adult liver, we used an acute hepatocyte-specific GR knockout model to study temporal hepatic lipid metabolism governed by GR at several preprandial and postprandial circadian timepoints. Lipidomics analysis revealed significant temporal lipid metabolism, where GR disruption results in impaired regulation of specific triglycerides, nonesterified fatty acids, and sphingolipids. This correlates with increased number and size of lipid droplets and mildly reduced mitochondrial respiration, most noticeably in the postprandial phase. Proteomics and transcriptomics analyses suggest that dysregulated lipid metabolism originates from pronounced induced expression of enzymes involved in fatty acid synthesis, β-oxidation, and sphingolipid metabolism. Integration of GR cistromic data suggests that induced gene expression is a result of regulatory actions secondary to direct GR effects on gene transcription.

Funder

SDU2020 initiative

Novo Nordisk Foundation, Independent Research Fund Denmark

Danish National Research Foundation

Center for Functional Genomics and Tissue Plasticity

INTEGRA research infrastructure

PRO-MS Danish National Mass Spectrometry Platform for Functional Proteomics

Danish Molecular Biomedical Imaging Center

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Endocrinology

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