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Publication : Foxa2 regulates lipid metabolism and ketogenesis in the liver during fasting and in diabetes.

First Author  Wolfrum C Year  2004
Journal  Nature Volume  432
Issue  7020 Pages  1027-32
PubMed ID  15616563 Mgi Jnum  J:95662
Mgi Id  MGI:3526758 Doi  10.1038/nature03047
Citation  Wolfrum C, et al. (2004) Foxa2 regulates lipid metabolism and ketogenesis in the liver during fasting and in diabetes. Nature 432(7020):1027-32
abstractText  The regulation of fat and glucose metabolism in the liver is controlled primarily by insulin and glucagon. Changes in the circulating concentrations of these hormones signal fed or starvation states and elicit counter-regulatory responses that maintain normoglycaemia. Here we show that in normal mice, plasma insulin inhibits the forkhead transcription factor Foxa2 by nuclear exclusion and that in the fasted (low insulin) state Foxa2 activates transcriptional programmes of lipid metabolism and ketogenesis. In insulin-resistant or hyperinsulinaemic mice, Foxa2 is inactive and permanently located in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes. In these mice, adenoviral expression of Foxa2T156A, a nuclear, constitutively active Foxa2 that cannot be inhibited by insulin, decreases hepatic triglyceride content, increases hepatic insulin sensitivity, reduces glucose production, normalizes plasma glucose and significantly lowers plasma insulin. These changes are associated with increased expression of genes encoding enzymes of fatty acid oxidation, ketogenesis and glycolysis. Chronic hyperinsulinaemia in insulin-resistant syndromes results in the cytoplasmic localization and inactivation of Foxa2, thereby promoting lipid accumulation and insulin resistance in the liver. Pharmacological intervention to inhibit phosphorylation of Foxa2 may be an effective treatment for type 2 diabetes.
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