Dietary fructose feeds hepatic lipogenesis via microbiota-derived acetate

Consumption of fructose has risen markedly in recent decades owing to the use of sucrose and high-fructose corn syrup in beverages and processed foods 1 , and this has contributed to increasing rates of obesity and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease 2 – 4 . Fructose intake triggers de novo lipogenesi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2020-03, Vol.579 (7800), p.586-591
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Steven, Jang, Cholsoon, Liu, Joyce, Uehara, Kahealani, Gilbert, Michael, Izzo, Luke, Zeng, Xianfeng, Trefely, Sophie, Fernandez, Sully, Carrer, Alessandro, Miller, Katelyn D., Schug, Zachary T., Snyder, Nathaniel W., Gade, Terence P., Titchenell, Paul M., Rabinowitz, Joshua D., Wellen, Kathryn E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Consumption of fructose has risen markedly in recent decades owing to the use of sucrose and high-fructose corn syrup in beverages and processed foods 1 , and this has contributed to increasing rates of obesity and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease 2 – 4 . Fructose intake triggers de novo lipogenesis in the liver 4 – 6 , in which carbon precursors of acetyl-CoA are converted into fatty acids. The ATP citrate lyase (ACLY) enzyme cleaves cytosolic citrate to generate acetyl-CoA, and is upregulated after consumption of carbohydrates 7 . Clinical trials are currently pursuing the inhibition of ACLY as a treatment for metabolic diseases 8 . However, the route from dietary fructose to hepatic acetyl-CoA and lipids remains unknown. Here, using in vivo isotope tracing, we show that liver-specific deletion of Acly in mice is unable to suppress fructose-induced lipogenesis. Dietary fructose is converted to acetate by the gut microbiota 9 , and this supplies lipogenic acetyl-CoA independently of ACLY 10 . Depletion of the microbiota or silencing of hepatic ACSS2, which generates acetyl-CoA from acetate, potently suppresses the conversion of bolus fructose into hepatic acetyl-CoA and fatty acids. When fructose is consumed more gradually to facilitate its absorption in the small intestine, both citrate cleavage in hepatocytes and microorganism-derived acetate contribute to lipogenesis. By contrast, the lipogenic transcriptional program is activated in response to fructose in a manner that is independent of acetyl-CoA metabolism. These data reveal a two-pronged mechanism that regulates hepatic lipogenesis, in which fructolysis within hepatocytes provides a signal to promote the expression of lipogenic genes, and the generation of microbial acetate feeds lipogenic pools of acetyl-CoA. A genetic mouse model is used to reveal a two-pronged mechanism of fructose-induced de novo lipogenesis in the liver, in which fructose catabolism in hepatocytes provides a signal to promote lipogenesis, whereas fructose metabolism by the gut microbiota provides acetate as a substrate to feed lipogenesis.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-020-2101-7