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Protein Kinase D2 drives chylomicron‐mediated lipid transport in the intestine and promotes obesity

Authors :
Trujillo‐Viera, Jonathan
El‐Merahbi, Rabih
Schmidt, Vanessa
Karwen, Till
Loza‐Valdes, Angel
Strohmeyer, Akim
Reuter, Saskia
Noh, Minhee
Wit, Magdalena
Hawro, Izabela
Mocek, Sabine
Fey, Christina
Mayer, Alexander E
Löffler, Mona C
Wilhelmi, Ilka
Metzger, Marco
Ishikawa, Eri
Yamasaki, Sho
Rau, Monika
Geier, Andreas
Hankir, Mohammed
Seyfried, Florian
Klingenspor, Martin
Sumara, Grzegorz
Publica
Source :
EMBO Molecular Medicine, Vol 13, Iss 5, Pp n/a-n/a (2021), EMBO Molecular Medicine
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Lipids are the most energy‐dense components of the diet, and their overconsumption promotes obesity and diabetes. Dietary fat content has been linked to the lipid processing activity by the intestine and its overall capacity to absorb triglycerides (TG). However, the signaling cascades driving intestinal lipid absorption in response to elevated dietary fat are largely unknown. Here, we describe an unexpected role of the protein kinase D2 (PKD2) in lipid homeostasis. We demonstrate that PKD2 activity promotes chylomicron‐mediated TG transfer in enterocytes. PKD2 increases chylomicron size to enhance the TG secretion on the basolateral side of the mouse and human enterocytes, which is associated with decreased abundance of APOA4. PKD2 activation in intestine also correlates positively with circulating TG in obese human patients. Importantly, deletion, inactivation, or inhibition of PKD2 ameliorates high‐fat diet‐induced obesity and diabetes and improves gut microbiota profile in mice. Taken together, our findings suggest that PKD2 represents a key signaling node promoting dietary fat absorption and may serve as an attractive target for the treatment of obesity.<br />We show that upon fat ingestion, Protein Kinase D2 stimulates chylomicron‐mediated triglyceride absorption in the intestine. Targeting PKD2, genetically or with small molecule inhibitors, reduces triglycerides absorption and prevents the development of obesity in mice and presumably in humans.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EMBO Molecular Medicine, Vol 13, Iss 5, Pp n/a-n/a (2021), EMBO Molecular Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....2a94483835c2ada8f38311e15c576c8b