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Truncation of Pik3r1 causes severe insulin resistance uncoupled from obesity and dyslipidaemia by increased energy expenditure

Authors :
Daniel Hart
Steven A. Murfitt
Albert Kwok
Patsy Tomlinson
David A Bulger
Antonio Vidal-Puig
Peter J. Voshol
Ineke Luijten
James A. West
Robert K. Semple
Julian L. Griffin
Jørgen Arendt Jensen
Samuel Virtue
Rachel G. Knox
Stephen O'Rahilly
Ilona Zvetkova
Rafeah Alam
Isabel Huang-Doran
Huang-Doran, Isabel [0000-0002-0573-6557]
West, James [0000-0002-1535-7737]
Vidal-Puig, Antonio [0000-0003-4220-9577]
O'Rahilly, Stephen [0000-0003-2199-4449]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Molecular Metabolism, Vol 40, Iss, Pp 101020-(2020), Molecular Metabolism, Kwok, A, Zvetkova, I, Virtue, S, Luijten, I, Huang-doran, I, Tomlinson, P, Bulger, D A, West, J, Murfitt, S, Griffin, J, Alam, R, Hart, D, Knox, R, Voshol, P, Vidal-puig, A, Jensen, J, O’rahilly, S & Semple, R K 2020, ' Truncation of Pik3r1 causes severe insulin resistance uncoupled from obesity and dyslipidemia by increased energy expenditure ', Molecular Metabolism, pp. 101020 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2020.101020
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Objective Insulin signalling via phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) requires PIK3R1-encoded regulatory subunits. C-terminal PIK3R1 mutations cause SHORT syndrome, as well as lipodystrophy and insulin resistance (IR), surprisingly without fatty liver or metabolic dyslipidaemia. We sought to investigate this discordance. Methods The human pathogenic Pik3r1 Y657∗ mutation was knocked into mice by homologous recombination. Growth, body composition, bioenergetic and metabolic profiles were investigated on chow and high-fat diet (HFD). We examined adipose and liver histology, and assessed liver responses to fasting and refeeding transcriptomically. Results Like humans with SHORT syndrome, Pik3r1WT/Y657∗ mice were small with severe IR, and adipose expansion on HFD was markedly reduced. Also as in humans, plasma lipid concentrations were low, and insulin-stimulated hepatic lipogenesis was not increased despite hyperinsulinemia. At odds with lipodystrophy, however, no adipocyte hypertrophy nor adipose inflammation was found. Liver lipogenic gene expression was not significantly altered, and unbiased transcriptomics showed only minor changes, including evidence of reduced endoplasmic reticulum stress in the fed state and diminished Rictor-dependent transcription on fasting. Increased energy expenditure, which was not explained by hyperglycaemia nor intestinal malabsorption, provided an alternative explanation for the uncoupling of IR from dyslipidaemia. Conclusions Pik3r1 dysfunction in mice phenocopies the IR and reduced adiposity without lipotoxicity of human SHORT syndrome. Decreased adiposity may not reflect bona fide lipodystrophy, but rather, increased energy expenditure, and we suggest that further study of brown adipose tissue in both humans and mice is warranted.<br />Highlights • SHORT syndrome features insulin resistance and reduced adiposity without dyslipidaemia and fatty liver. • A mouse model with a pathogenic human PI 3-Kinase mutation recapitulates this uncoupling. • Surprisingly, no adipose injury nor increased liver de novo lipogenesis is seen. • Energy expenditure is increased, causing resistance to diet-induced obesity. • This increases evidence for some beneficial metabolic effects of PI 3-Kinase inhibition.

Details

ISSN :
22128778
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b8ae407d789a93c353aadb5e0088968e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2020.101020