An integrative transcriptional logic model of hepatic insulin resistance

T. Kitamoto, T. Kuo, A. Okabe, Atsushi Kaneda, D. Accili
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Significance The liver is a source of excess lipid, atherogenic lipoproteins, and glucose in patients with type 2 diabetes. These factors predispose to micro- and macrovascular complications. The underlying pathophysiology is not well understood, and mechanistic insight into it may provide better tools to prevent, treat, and reverse the disease. Here, we propose an alternative explanation for this pathophysiologic conundrum by illustrating a transcriptional “logic” underlying the regulation of different classes of genes. These findings can be interpreted to provide an integrated stepwise model for the coexistence of lipid and glucose abnormalities in hepatic insulin resistance. Abnormalities of lipid/lipoprotein and glucose metabolism are hallmarks of hepatic insulin resistance in type 2 diabetes. The former antedate the latter, but the latter become progressively refractory to treatment and contribute to therapeutic failures. It’s unclear whether the two processes share a common pathogenesis and what underlies their progressive nature. In this study, we investigated the hypothesis that genes in the lipid/lipoprotein pathway and those in the glucose metabolic pathway are governed by different transcriptional regulatory logics that affect their response to physiologic (fasting/refeeding) as well as pathophysiologic cues (insulin resistance and hyperglycemia). To this end, we obtained genomic and transcriptomic maps of the key insulin-regulated transcription factor, FoxO1, and integrated them with those of CREB, PPAR-α, and glucocorticoid receptor. We found that glucose metabolic genes are primarily regulated by promoter and intergenic enhancers in a fasting-dependent manner, while lipid genes are regulated through fasting-dependent intron enhancers and fasting-independent enhancerless introns. Glucose genes also showed a remarkable transcriptional resiliency (i.e., the ability to compensate following constitutive FoxO1 ablation through an enrichment of active marks at shared PPAR-α/FoxO1 regulatory elements). Unexpectedly, insulin resistance and hyperglycemia were associated with a “spreading” of FoxO1 binding to enhancers and the emergence of unique target sites. We surmise that this unusual pattern correlates with the progressively intractable nature of hepatic insulin resistance. This transcriptional logic provides an integrated model to interpret the combined lipid and glucose abnormalities of type 2 diabetes.
肝脏胰岛素抵抗的综合转录逻辑模型
肝脏是2型糖尿病患者过量脂质、致动脉粥样硬化脂蛋白和葡萄糖的来源。这些因素易导致微血管和大血管并发症。潜在的病理生理尚不清楚,对其机制的了解可能为预防、治疗和逆转疾病提供更好的工具。在这里,我们通过说明不同类别基因调控的转录“逻辑”,为这一病理生理难题提出了另一种解释。这些发现可以解释为肝脏胰岛素抵抗中脂质和葡萄糖异常共存提供了一个综合的逐步模型。脂质/脂蛋白和葡萄糖代谢异常是2型糖尿病肝脏胰岛素抵抗的标志。前者先于后者,但后者逐渐变得难以治疗,并导致治疗失败。目前尚不清楚这两个过程是否有共同的发病机制,以及是什么导致了它们的进展性。在这项研究中,我们研究了脂质/脂蛋白途径中的基因和葡萄糖代谢途径中的基因受不同转录调控逻辑的控制,这些转录调控逻辑影响它们对生理(禁食/再喂养)和病理生理线索(胰岛素抵抗和高血糖)的反应。为此,我们获得了胰岛素调控关键转录因子fox01的基因组和转录组图谱,并将其与CREB、PPAR-α和糖皮质激素受体的基因组和转录组图谱进行了整合。我们发现葡萄糖代谢基因主要由启动子和基因间增强子以禁食依赖的方式调控,而脂质基因则通过禁食依赖的内含子增强子和不依赖于禁食的内含子调控。葡萄糖基因还显示出显著的转录弹性(即,通过在PPAR-α/FoxO1共同调控元件上富集活性标记来补偿FoxO1消融的能力)。出乎意料的是,胰岛素抵抗和高血糖与fox01结合增强子的“扩散”和独特靶点的出现有关。我们推测,这种不寻常的模式与肝脏胰岛素抵抗的逐渐难治性有关。这种转录逻辑提供了一个综合模型来解释2型糖尿病的脂质和葡萄糖联合异常。
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