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Hepatic FXR/SHP axis modulates systemic glucose and fatty acid homeostasis in aged mice
Author(s) -
Kim Kang Ho,
Choi Sungwoo,
Zhou Ying,
Kim Eun Young,
Lee Jae Man,
Saha Pradip K.,
Anakk Sayeepriyadarshini,
Moore David D.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1002/hep.29199
Subject(s) - farnesoid x receptor , endocrinology , medicine , small heterodimer partner , glucose homeostasis , homeostasis , fatty liver , fatty acid metabolism , biology , adipose tissue , bile acid , knockout mouse , fatty acid , beta oxidation , white adipose tissue , nuclear receptor , insulin , receptor , metabolism , insulin resistance , biochemistry , transcription factor , disease , gene
The nuclear receptors farnesoid X receptor (FXR; NR1H4) and small heterodimer partner (SHP; NR0B2) play crucial roles in bile acid homeostasis. Global double knockout of FXR and SHP signaling (DKO) causes severe cholestasis and liver injury at early ages. Here, we report an unexpected beneficial impact on glucose and fatty acid metabolism in aged DKO mice, which show suppressed body weight gain and adiposity when maintained on normal chow. This phenotype was not observed in single Fxr or Shp knockouts. Liver‐specific Fxr/Shp double knockout mice fully phenocopied the DKO mice, with lower hepatic triglyceride accumulation, improved glucose/insulin tolerance, and accelerated fatty acid use. In both DKO and liver‐specific Fxr/Shp double knockout livers, these metabolic phenotypes were associated with altered expression of fatty acid metabolism and autophagy‐machinery genes. Loss of the hepatic FXR/SHP axis reprogrammed white and brown adipose tissue gene expression to boost fatty acid usage. Conclusion : Combined deletion of the hepatic FXR/SHP axis improves glucose/fatty acid homeostasis in aged mice, reversing the aging phenotype of body weight gain, increased adiposity, and glucose/insulin tolerance, suggesting a central role of this axis in whole‐body energy homeostasis. (H epatology 2017;66:498–509).