4.8 Article

Glucose Sensing by Skeletal Myocytes Couples Nutrient Signaling to Systemic Homeostasis

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 66, Issue 3, Pages 332-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2017.04.007

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [DK112800, DK102456]
  2. American Heart Association Scientist Development Grant [15SDG22970032]
  3. Animal Phenotyping Core of the Michigan Diabetes Research Center [P30 DK020572]
  4. Michigan Nutrition and Obesity Center [P30 DK089503]

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Skeletal muscle is a major site of postprandial glucose disposal. Inadequate insulin action in skeletal myocytes contributes to hyperglycemia in diabetes. Although glucose is known to stimulate insulin secretion by beta cells, whether it directly engages nutrient signaling pathways in skeletal muscle to maintain systemic glucose homeostasis remains largely unexplored. Here we identified the Baf60c-Deptor-AKT pathway as a target of muscle glucose sensing that augments insulin action in skeletal myocytes. Genetic activation of this pathway improved postprandial glucose disposal in mice, whereas its muscle-specific ablation impaired insulin action and led to postprandial glucose intolerance. Mechanistically, glucose triggers K-ATP channel-dependent calcium signaling, which promotes HDAC5 phosphorylation and nuclear exclusion, leading to Baf60c induction and insulin-independent AKT activation. This pathway is engaged by the anti-diabetic sulfonylurea drugs to exert their full glucose-lowering effects. These findings uncover an unexpected mechanism of glucose sensing in skeletal myocytes that contributes to homeostasis and therapeutic action.

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