4.6 Article

In vivo expression of carbohydrate responsive element binding protein in lean and obese rats

Journal

DIABETES & METABOLISM
Volume 31, Issue 6, Pages 558-566

Publisher

MASSON EDITEUR
DOI: 10.1016/S1262-3636(07)70231-8

Keywords

lipogenesis; obesity; steatosis; SREBP-1c

Ask authors/readers for more resources

ChREBP (Carbohydrate response element binding protein) is considered to mediate the stimulatory effect of glucose on the expression of lipogenic genes. Its activity is stimulated by glucose. Less is known on the control of its expression. This expression could be controlled by nutritional (glucose, fatty acids) and hormonal (insulin) factors. We examined the in vivo nutritional control of ChREBP expression in liver and adipose tissue of Wistar rats. Compared respectively to the fed state and to a high carbohydrate diet, ChREBP mRNA concentrations were not modified by fasting or a high fat diet in rat liver and adipose tissue. FAS and ACC1 mRNA concentrations were on the contrary decreased as expected by fasting and high fat diets and these variations of FAS and ACC1 mRNA were positively related to those of SREBP-1c mRNA and protein, but not of ChREBP mRNA. Therefore i) ChREBP expression appears poorly responsive to modifications of nutritional condition, ii) modifications of the expression of ChREBP do not seem implicated in the physiological control of lipogenesis. To investigate the possible role of ChREBP in pathological situations we measured its mRNA concentrations in the liver and adipose tissue of obese Zucher rats. ChREBP expression was increased in the liver but not the adipose tissue of obese rats compared to their lean littermates. These results support a role of ChREBP in the development of hepatic steatosis and hypertriglyceridemia but not of obesity in this experimental model.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available