4.6 Article

A Role for Mitochondrial Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase (PEPCK-M) in the Regulation of Hepatic Gluconeogenesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 11, Pages 7257-7263

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.C113.544759

Keywords

Diabetes; Gluconeogenesis; Glyceroneogenesis; GTPase; Intermediary Metabolism; Metabolic Regulation; Metabolic Tracers; Metabolism; Mitochondrial Metabolism; Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 DK092606, K08 DK080142, R01 DK-40936, R24 DK-085638, U24 DK-059635, P30 DK79310-01, P30 DK34989, P30 DK45735]
  2. American Diabetes Association [7-12-BS-092]
  3. Societe Francophone de Nephrologie, Hospices Civils de Lyon

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Background: PEPCK-M is generally considered irrelevant for glucose production, although gluconeogenesis has never been characterized in its absence. Results: PEPCK-M loss impaired gluconeogenesis from lactate, lowered plasma glucose, insulin, and triglycerides, reduced hepatic glycogen, and increased glycerol turnover. Conclusion: Approximately a third of gluconeogenesis comes from PEPCK-M. Significance: The nutrient-sensitive PEPCK-M has been overlooked and is potentially important for metabolic diseases such as diabetes. Synthesis of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) from oxaloacetate is an absolute requirement for gluconeogenesis from mitochondrial substrates. Generally, this reaction has solely been attributed to the cytosolic isoform of PEPCK (PEPCK-C), although loss of the mitochondrial isoform (PEPCK-M) has never been assessed. Despite catalyzing the same reaction, to date the only significant role reported in mammals for the mitochondrial isoform is as a glucose sensor necessary for insulin secretion. We hypothesized that this nutrient-sensing mitochondrial GTP-dependent pathway contributes importantly to gluconeogenesis. PEPCK-M was acutely silenced in gluconeogenic tissues of rats using antisense oligonucleotides both in vivo and in isolated hepatocytes. Silencing PEPCK-M lowers plasma glucose, insulin, and triglycerides, reduces white adipose, and depletes hepatic glycogen, but raises lactate. There is a switch of gluconeogenic substrate preference to glycerol that quantitatively accounts for a third of glucose production. In contrast to the severe mitochondrial deficiency characteristic of PEPCK-C knock-out livers, hepatocytes from PEPCK-M-deficient livers maintained normal oxidative function. Consistent with its predicted role, gluconeogenesis rates from hepatocytes lacking PEPCK-M are severely reduced for lactate, alanine, and glutamine, but not for pyruvate and glycerol. Thus, PEPCK-M has a direct role in fasted and fed glucose homeostasis, and this mitochondrial GTP-dependent pathway should be reconsidered for its involvement in both normal and diabetic metabolism.

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