4.7 Article

A systems biology analysis of the unique and overlapping transcriptional responses to caloric restriction and dietary methionine restriction in rats

Journal

FASEB JOURNAL
Volume 28, Issue 6, Pages 2577-2590

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1096/fj.14-249458

Keywords

obesity; animal models; insulin sensitivity; amino acid sensing

Funding

  1. American Diabetes Association (ADA) [1-12-BS-58]
  2. U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [DK-096311]
  3. ADA [7-13-MI-05]
  4. NIH [1F32DK098918-01, P20-GM103528, P30 DK072476]
  5. Mouse Metabolic Phenotyping Center Consortium (NIH) [U24DK076169]

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Dietary methionine restriction (MR) and calorie restriction (CR) each improve metabolic health and extend life span. We used comprehensive transcriptome profiling and systems biology analysis to interrogate the unique and overlapping molecular responses in rats provided these dietary regimens for 20 mo after weaning. Microarray analysis was conducted on inguinal white adipose (IWAT), brown adipose tissue (BAT), liver, and skeletal muscle. Compared to controls, CR-induced transcriptomic responses (absolute fold change >= 1.5 and P <= 0.05) were comparable in IWAT, BAT, and liver (similar to 800 genes). MR-induced effects were largely restricted to IWAT and liver (similar to 2400 genes). Pathway enrichment and gene-coexpression analyses showed that induction of fatty acid synthesis in IWAT was common to CR and MR, whereas immunity and proinflammatory signaling pathways were specifically down-regulated in MR-treated IWAT and liver (FDR <= 0.07-0.3). BAT demonstrated consistent down-regulation of PPAR-signaling under CR and MR, whereas muscle was largely unaffected. Interactome analysis identified CR-specific down-regulation of cytoskeletal matrix components in IWAT and MR-specific up-regulation of ribosomal genes in liver (FDR <= 0.001). Transcriptomic down-regulation of inflammation genes by MR in IWAT was consistent with upstream inhibition of STAT3. Together, these results provide an integrated picture of the breadth of transcriptional responses to MR and CR among key metabolic tissues.

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