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Publication : Mutation of regulatory phosphorylation sites in PFKFB2 does not affect the anti-fibrotic effect of metformin in the kidney.

First Author  Harley G Year  2023
Journal  PLoS One Volume  18
Issue  2 Pages  e0280792
PubMed ID  36757995 Mgi Jnum  J:344613
Mgi Id  MGI:7433665 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0280792
Citation  Harley G, et al. (2023) Mutation of regulatory phosphorylation sites in PFKFB2 does not affect the anti-fibrotic effect of metformin in the kidney. PLoS One 18(2):e0280792
abstractText  The anti-fibrotic effect of metformin has been widely demonstrated. Fibrosis in the kidney after injury is associated with reduced expression of genes involved in both fatty acid and glycolytic energy metabolism. We have previously reported that the anti-fibrotic effect of metformin requires phosphoregulation of fatty acid oxidation by AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). To determine whether metformin also acts via regulation of glycolysis, we mutated regulatory phosphosites in the PFKFB2 isoform of 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-biphosphatase (PFKFB2), a key regulator of glycolysis in the kidney. Mice with inactivating knockin (KI) mutations of the phosphorylation sites in PFKFB2 (PFKFB2 KI mice), which reduces the ability to increase the rate of glycolysis following stimulation, were used. Metformin was administered via drinking water to mice with a unilateral ureteric obstruction (UUO) model of renal fibrosis. In the PFKFB2 KI mice treated with metformin, there was decreased fibrosis and macrophage infiltration following UUO as assessed by Western blot for fibronectin and RT-PCR for alpha-smooth muscle actin, collagen 3, and F4.80, and confirmed by histology. Expression of the inducible PFKFB3 isoform was increased with metformin in UUO in both WT and PFKFB2 KI mice. There was no significant difference between WT and PFKFB2 KI mice treated with metformin in the degree of fibrosis following UUO in any of the Western blot or RT-PCR parameters that were measured. These data show that inhibition of the regulation of glycolysis by PFKFB2 does not diminish the anti-fibrotic effect of metformin in a model of renal fibrosis.
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