Author:
Zhang Zhaoyue,TeSlaa Tara,Xu Xincheng,Zeng Xianfeng,Yang Lifeng,Xing Gang,Tesz Gregory J,Clasquin Michelle F,Rabinowitz Joshua D
Abstract
SummaryCarbohydrate can be converted into fat by de novo lipogenesis1,2. This process is known to occur in adipose and liver, and its activity is upregulated in fatty liver disease3. Chemically, de novo lipogenesis involves polymerization and reduction of acetyl-CoA, using NADPH as the electron donor1. While regulation of the responsible enzymes has been extensively studied, the feedstocks used to generate acetyl-CoA and NADPH remain unclear. Here we show that, while de novo lipogenesis in adipose is supported by glucose and its catabolism via the pentose phosphate pathway to make NADPH, liver makes fat without relying on glucose. Instead, liver derives acetyl-CoA from acetate and lactate, and NADPH from folate-mediated serine catabolism. Such NADPH generation involves the cytosolic serine pathway running in liver in the opposite direction observed in most tissues and tumors4,5, with NADPH made by the SHMT1-MTHFD1-ALDH1L1 reaction sequence. Thus, specifically in liver, folate metabolism is wired to support cytosolic NADPH production for lipogenesis. More generally, while the same enzymes are involved in fat synthesis in liver and adipose, different substrates are utilized, opening the door to tissue-specific pharmacological interventions.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory