Hepatic non-parenchymal S100A9-TLR4-mTORC1 axis normalizes diabetic ketogenesis

Author:

Ursino Gloria,Ramadori GiorgioORCID,Höfler Anna,Odouard Soline,Teixeira Pryscila D. S.,Visentin Florian,Veyrat-Durebex ChristelleORCID,Lucibello GiuliaORCID,Firnkes Raquel,Ricci Serena,Vianna Claudia R.,Jia LinORCID,Dirlewanger Mirjam,Klee PhilippeORCID,Elmquist Joel K.,Roth JohannesORCID,Vogl ThomasORCID,Schwitzgebel Valérie M.ORCID,Jornayvaz François R.ORCID,Boland AndreasORCID,Coppari RobertoORCID

Abstract

AbstractUnrestrained ketogenesis leads to life-threatening ketoacidosis whose incidence is high in patients with diabetes. While insulin therapy reduces ketogenesis this approach is sub-optimal. Here, we report an insulin-independent pathway able to normalize diabetic ketogenesis. By generating insulin deficient male mice lacking or re-expressing Toll-Like Receptor 4 (TLR4) only in liver or hepatocytes, we demonstrate that hepatic TLR4 in non-parenchymal cells mediates the ketogenesis-suppressing action of S100A9. Mechanistically, S100A9 acts extracellularly to activate the mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) in a TLR4-dependent manner. Accordingly, hepatic-restricted but not hepatocyte-restricted loss of Tuberous Sclerosis Complex 1 (TSC1, an mTORC1 inhibitor) corrects insulin-deficiency-induced hyperketonemia. Therapeutically, recombinant S100A9 administration restrains ketogenesis and improves hyperglycemia without causing hypoglycemia in diabetic mice. Also, circulating S100A9 in patients with ketoacidosis is only marginally increased hence unveiling a window of opportunity to pharmacologically augment S100A9 for preventing unrestrained ketogenesis. In summary, our findings reveal the hepatic S100A9-TLR4-mTORC1 axis in non-parenchymal cells as a promising therapeutic target for restraining diabetic ketogenesis.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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