4.7 Article

Systemic LSD1 Inhibition Prevents Aberrant Remodeling of Metabolism in Obesity

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DIABETES
卷 71, 期 12, 页码 2513-2529

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AMER DIABETES ASSOC
DOI: 10.2337/db21-1131

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资金

  1. Larry L. Hillblom Foundation [2021-D-008-FEL]
  2. JDRF postdoctoral fellowship [3-PDF-2014-193-A-N]
  3. Diabetes Research Center Pilot and Feasibility grant [P30 DK063491]
  4. John G. Davies Endowed Fellowship in Pancreatic Research [S1079-1002614, S1105-1002847-AWD]
  5. Foundation Leducq [16CVD01]
  6. National Institutes of Health [R01 DK068471, R01 DK078803]
  7. UCSD School of Medicine Microscopy Core grant NINDS [P30 NS047101]

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This study demonstrates the role of an enzyme called LSD1 in obesity-associated metabolic reprogramming. The inhibition of LSD1 reduces food intake and body weight, improves fatty liver disease, and enhances insulin sensitivity and glycemic control in obese mice. The findings suggest that targeting LSD1 could be a potential strategy for the treatment of obesity and its associated complications.
The transition fromlean to obese states involves systemic metabolic remodeling that impacts insulin sensitivity, lipid partitioning, inflammation, and glycemic control. Here, we have taken a pharmacological approach to test the role of a nutrient-regulated chromatin modifier, lysinespecific demethylase ( LSD1), in obesity-associated metabolic reprogramming. We show that systemic administration of an LSD1 inhibitor (GSK-LSD1) reduces food intake and body weight, ameliorates nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and improves insulin sensitivity and glycemic control in mouse models of obesity. GSK-LSD1 has little effect on systemic metabolism of lean mice, suggesting that LSD1 has a context-dependent role in promoting maladaptive changes in obesity. In analysis of insulin target tissues we identified white adipose tissue as the major site of insulin sensitization by GSK-LSD1, where it reduces adipocyte inflammation and lipolysis. We demonstrate that GSK-LSD1 reverses NAFLD in a non-hepatocyte-autonomous manner, suggesting an indirect mechanism potentially via inhibition of adipocyte lipolysis and subsequent effects on lipid partitioning. Pair-feeding experiments further revealed that effects of GSK-LSD1 on hyperglycemia and NAFLD are not a consequence of reduced food intake and weight loss. These findings suggest that targeting LSD1 could be a strategy for treatment of obesity and its associated complications including type 2 diabetes and NAFLD.

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