Adipose HuR protects against diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance

Human antigen R (HuR) is a member of the Hu family of RNA-binding proteins and is involved in many physiological processes. Obesity, as a worldwide healthcare problem, has attracted more and more attention. To investigate the role of adipose HuR, we generate adipose-specific HuR knockout (HuR AKO )...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2019-05, Vol.10 (1), p.2375-2375, Article 2375
Hauptverfasser: Li, Jingyuan, Gong, Li, Liu, Shaozhuang, Zhang, Yujie, Zhang, Chunmei, Tian, Mi, Lu, Huixia, Bu, Peili, Yang, Jianmin, Ouyang, Changhan, Jiang, Xiuxin, Wu, Jiliang, Zhang, Yun, Min, Qing, Zhang, Cheng, Zhang, Wencheng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Human antigen R (HuR) is a member of the Hu family of RNA-binding proteins and is involved in many physiological processes. Obesity, as a worldwide healthcare problem, has attracted more and more attention. To investigate the role of adipose HuR, we generate adipose-specific HuR knockout (HuR AKO ) mice. As compared with control mice, HuR AKO mice show obesity when induced with a high-fat diet, along with insulin resistance, glucose intolerance, hypercholesterolemia and increased inflammation in adipose tissue. The obesity of HuR AKO mice is attributed to adipocyte hypertrophy in white adipose tissue due to decreased expression of adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL). HuR positively regulates ATGL expression by promoting the mRNA stability and translation of ATGL . Consistently, the expression of HuR in adipose tissue is reduced in obese humans. This study suggests that adipose HuR may be a critical regulator of ATGL expression and lipolysis and thereby controls obesity and metabolic syndrome. Human antigen R (HuR) is a RNA-binding protein. Here the authors investigate its role in adipose tissue and find that it protects mice from diet-induced obesity, prevents adipocyte hypertrophy, and promotes lipolysis, which may at least in part be due to HuR-dependent ATGL mRNA stability regulation demonstrated in-vitro.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-019-10348-0