A lipid to treat non-alcoholic fatty liver disease - the dawn of 'lipo-rehabilitation'?
- PMID: 22015962
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jhep.2011.10.002
A lipid to treat non-alcoholic fatty liver disease - the dawn of 'lipo-rehabilitation'?
Abstract
Nuclear hormone receptors regulate diverse metabolic pathways and the orphan nuclear receptor LRH-1 (also known as NR5A2) regulates bile acid biosynthesis. Structural studies have identified phospholipids as potential LRH-1 ligands, but their functional relevance is unclear. Here we show that an unusual phosphatidylcholine species with two saturated 12 carbon fatty acid acyl sidechains (dilauroyl phosphatidylcholine (DLPC)) is an LRH-1 agonist ligand in vitro. DLPC treatment induces bile acid biosynthetic enzymes in mouse liver, increases bile acid levels, and lowers hepatictriglycerides and serum glucose. DLPC treatment also decreases hepatic steatosis and improves glucose homeostasis in two mouse models of insulin resistance. Both the antidiabetic and lipotropic effects are lost in liver-specific Lrh-1 knockouts. These findings identify an LRH-1 dependent phosphatidylcholine signalling pathway that regulates bile acid metabolism and glucose homeostasis.
Comment on
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A nuclear-receptor-dependent phosphatidylcholine pathway with antidiabetic effects.Nature. 2011 May 25;474(7352):506-10. doi: 10.1038/nature10111. Nature. 2011. PMID: 21614002 Free PMC article.
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