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Cyclin C regulates adipogenesis by stimulating transcriptional activity of CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein α.

Citation
Song, Z., et al. “Cyclin C Regulates Adipogenesis By Stimulating Transcriptional Activity Of Ccaat/Enhancer-Binding Protein Α.”. The Journal Of Biological Chemistry, pp. 8918-8932.
Center Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Author Ziyi Song, Alus M Xiaoli, Quanwei Zhang, Yi Zhang, Ellen S T Yang, Sven Wang, Rui Chang, Zhengdong D Zhang, Gongshe Yang, Randy Strich, Jeffrey E Pessin, Fajun Yang
Keywords C/EBPα, Mediator complex, PPARγ, adipocyte, adipogenesis, brown adipocyte, cell differentiation, cyclin C, gene expression, transcription coregulator
Abstract

Brown adipose tissue is important for maintaining energy homeostasis and adaptive thermogenesis in rodents and humans. As disorders arising from dysregulated energy metabolism, such as obesity and metabolic diseases, have increased, so has interest in the molecular mechanisms of adipocyte biology. Using a functional screen, we identified cyclin C (CycC), a conserved subunit of the Mediator complex, as a novel regulator for brown adipocyte formation. siRNA-mediated CycC knockdown (KD) in brown preadipocytes impaired the early transcriptional program of differentiation, and genetic KO of CycC completely blocked the differentiation process. RNA sequencing analyses of CycC-KD revealed a critical role of CycC in activating genes co-regulated by peroxisome proliferator activated receptor γ (PPARγ) and CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein α (C/EBPα). Overexpression of PPARγ2 or addition of the PPARγ ligand rosiglitazone rescued the defects in CycC-KO brown preadipocytes and efficiently activated the PPARγ-responsive promoters in both WT and CycC-KO cells, suggesting that CycC is not essential for PPARγ transcriptional activity. In contrast, CycC-KO significantly reduced C/EBPα-dependent gene expression. Unlike for PPARγ, overexpression of C/EBPα could not induce C/EBPα target gene expression in CycC-KO cells or rescue the CycC-KO defects in brown adipogenesis, suggesting that CycC is essential for C/EBPα-mediated gene activation. CycC physically interacted with C/EBPα, and this interaction was required for C/EBPα transactivation domain activity. Consistent with the role of C/EBPα in white adipogenesis, CycC-KD also inhibited differentiation of 3T3-L1 cells into white adipocytes. Together, these data indicate that CycC activates adipogenesis in part by stimulating the transcriptional activity of C/EBPα.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
The Journal of biological chemistry
Volume
292
Issue
21
Number of Pages
8918-8932
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1083-351X
DOI
10.1074/jbc.M117.776229
Alternate Journal
J. Biol. Chem.
PMID
28351837
PMCID
PMC5448125
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