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Publication : Short-Chain Fatty Acids Protect Against High-Fat Diet-Induced Obesity via a PPARγ-Dependent Switch From Lipogenesis to Fat Oxidation.

First Author  den Besten G Year  2015
Journal  Diabetes Volume  64
Issue  7 Pages  2398-408
PubMed ID  25695945 Mgi Jnum  J:249382
Mgi Id  MGI:5922805 Doi  10.2337/db14-1213
Citation  den Besten G, et al. (2015) Short-Chain Fatty Acids Protect Against High-Fat Diet-Induced Obesity via a PPARgamma-Dependent Switch From Lipogenesis to Fat Oxidation. Diabetes 64(7):2398-408
abstractText  Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) are the main products of dietary fiber fermentation and are believed to drive the fiber-related prevention of the metabolic syndrome. Here we show that dietary SCFAs induce a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPARgamma)-dependent switch from lipid synthesis to utilization. Dietary SCFA supplementation prevented and reversed high-fat diet-induced metabolic abnormalities in mice by decreasing PPARgamma expression and activity. This increased the expression of mitochondrial uncoupling protein 2 and raised the AMP-to-ATP ratio, thereby stimulating oxidative metabolism in liver and adipose tissue via AMPK. The SCFA-induced reduction in body weight and stimulation of insulin sensitivity were absent in mice with adipose-specific disruption of PPARgamma. Similarly, SCFA-induced reduction of hepatic steatosis was absent in mice lacking hepatic PPARgamma. These results demonstrate that adipose and hepatic PPARgamma are critical mediators of the beneficial effects of SCFAs on the metabolic syndrome, with clearly distinct and complementary roles. Our findings indicate that SCFAs may be used therapeutically as cheap and selective PPARgamma modulators.
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