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Publication : Enterocyte-specific ATGL overexpression affects intestinal and systemic cholesterol homeostasis.

First Author  Korbelius M Year  2022
Journal  Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Cell Biol Lipids Volume  1867
Issue  4 Pages  159121
PubMed ID  35150895 Mgi Jnum  J:321542
Mgi Id  MGI:6885264 Doi  10.1016/j.bbalip.2022.159121
Citation  Korbelius M, et al. (2022) Enterocyte-specific ATGL overexpression affects intestinal and systemic cholesterol homeostasis. Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Cell Biol Lipids 1867(4):159121
abstractText  Enterocytes of the small intestine (SI) play an important role in maintaining systemic lipid levels by regulating dietary lipid absorption and postprandial lipoprotein secretion. An excessive amount of dietary-derived triglycerides (TGs) taken up by the apical side of enterocytes or basolaterally internalized lipoprotein remnants can be transiently stored in cytosolic lipid droplets (cLDs). As mice lacking adipose TG lipase (ATGL) in the SI display massive accumulation of cLDs but also delayed cholesterol absorption, we hypothesized that SI-specific overexpression of ATGL (Atgl iTg) might have beneficial effects on lipid homeostasis in the gut and possibly throughout the body. Here, we demonstrate that Atgl iTg mice had only modestly increased enzymatic activity despite drastically elevated Atgl mRNA levels (up to 120-fold) on chow diet, and was highly induced upon high-fat/high-cholesterol diet (HF/HCD) feeding. Atgl iTg mice showed markedly reduced intestinal TG concentrations after acute and chronic lipid challenge without affecting chylomicron TG secretion. Circulating plasma cholesterol levels were significantly lower in Atgl iTg mice under different feeding conditions, contrasting the accelerated uptake of dietary cholesterol into the circulation after HF/HCD feeding. In the fasted state, gene expression analysis revealed modulation of PPARalpha and liver X receptor (LXR) target genes by an increased fatty acid release, whereas the decreased plasma cholesterol concentrations in refed mice were more likely due to changes in HDL synthesis and secretion. We conclude that ATGL, in addition to its role in TG catabolism, plays a critical role in whole-body cholesterol homeostasis by modulating PPARalpha and LXR signaling in intestinal enterocytes.
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