Early-onset metabolic syndrome in mice lacking the intestinal uric acid transporter SLC2A9

Excess circulating uric acid, a product of hepatic glycolysis and purine metabolism, often accompanies metabolic syndrome. However, whether hyperuricaemia contributes to the development of metabolic syndrome or is merely a by-product of other processes that cause this disorder has not been resolved....

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2014-08, Vol.5 (1), p.4642-4642, Article 4642
Hauptverfasser: DeBosch, Brian J, Kluth, Oliver, Fujiwara, Hideji, Schürmann, Annette, Moley, Kelle
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Excess circulating uric acid, a product of hepatic glycolysis and purine metabolism, often accompanies metabolic syndrome. However, whether hyperuricaemia contributes to the development of metabolic syndrome or is merely a by-product of other processes that cause this disorder has not been resolved. In addition, how uric acid is cleared from the circulation is incompletely understood. Here we present a genetic model of spontaneous, early-onset metabolic syndrome in mice lacking the enterocyte urate transporter Glut9 (encoded by the SLC2A9 gene). Glut9-deficient mice develop impaired enterocyte uric acid transport kinetics, hyperuricaemia, hyperuricosuria, spontaneous hypertension, dyslipidaemia and elevated body fat. Allopurinol, a xanthine oxidase inhibitor, can reverse the hypertension and hypercholesterolaemia. These data provide evidence that hyperuricaemia per se could have deleterious metabolic sequelae. Moreover, these findings suggest that enterocytes may regulate whole-body metabolism, and that enterocyte urate metabolism could potentially be targeted to modulate or prevent metabolic syndrome. Elevated blood levels of urate have been linked to metabolic diseases. Here the authors show that the urate transporter, GLUT9, in enterocytes is important for the extrarenal excretion of urate, and that primary hyperuricaemia in mice lacking Glut9 is sufficient to develop metabolic syndrome.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms5642