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Publication : Dietary excess regulates absorption and surface of gut epithelium through intestinal PPARα.

First Author  Stojanović O Year  2021
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  12
Issue  1 Pages  7031
PubMed ID  34857752 Mgi Jnum  J:321703
Mgi Id  MGI:6836458 Doi  10.1038/s41467-021-27133-7
Citation  Stojanovic O, et al. (2021) Dietary excess regulates absorption and surface of gut epithelium through intestinal PPARalpha. Nat Commun 12(1):7031
abstractText  Intestinal surface changes in size and function, but what propels these alterations and what are their metabolic consequences is unknown. Here we report that the food amount is a positive determinant of the gut surface area contributing to an increased absorptive function, reversible by reducing daily food. While several upregulated intestinal energetic pathways are dispensable, the intestinal PPARalpha is instead necessary for the genetic and environment overeating-induced increase of the gut absorptive capacity. In presence of dietary lipids, intestinal PPARalpha knock-out or its pharmacological antagonism suppress intestinal crypt expansion and shorten villi in mice and in human intestinal biopsies, diminishing the postprandial triglyceride transport and nutrient uptake. Intestinal PPARalpha ablation limits systemic lipid absorption and restricts lipid droplet expansion and PLIN2 levels, critical for droplet formation. This improves the lipid metabolism, and reduces body adiposity and liver steatosis, suggesting an alternative target for treating obesity.
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