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Repression of Adipose Tissue Fibrosis through a PRDM16-GTF2IRD1 Complex Improves Systemic Glucose Homeostasis.

Citation
Hasegawa, Y., et al. “Repression Of Adipose Tissue Fibrosis Through A Prdm16-Gtf2Ird1 Complex Improves Systemic Glucose Homeostasis.”. Cell Metabolism, pp. 180-194.e6.
Center Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Multicenter
Multicenter
Featured
Author Yutaka Hasegawa, Kenji Ikeda, Yong Chen, Diana L Alba, Daniel Stifler, Kosaku Shinoda, Takashi Hosono, Pema Maretich, Yangyu Yang, Yasushi Ishigaki, Jingyi Chi, Paul Cohen, Suneil K Koliwad, Shingo Kajimura
Keywords EHMT1, GTF2IRD1, PRDM16, UCP1-independent, adipose tissue fibrosis, beige adipocyte, brown adipose tissue, diabetes, Insulin resistance, obesity
Abstract

Adipose tissue fibrosis is a hallmark of malfunction that is linked to insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes; however, what regulates this process remains unclear. Here we show that the PRDM16 transcriptional complex, a dominant activator of brown/beige adipocyte development, potently represses adipose tissue fibrosis in an uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1)-independent manner. By purifying the PRDM16 complex, we identified GTF2IRD1, a member of the TFII-I family of DNA-binding proteins, as a cold-inducible transcription factor that mediates the repressive action of the PRDM16 complex on fibrosis. Adipocyte-selective expression of GTF2IRD1 represses adipose tissue fibrosis and improves systemic glucose homeostasis independent of body-weight loss, while deleting GTF2IRD1 promotes fibrosis in a cell-autonomous manner. GTF2IRD1 represses the transcription of transforming growth factor β-dependent pro-fibrosis genes by recruiting PRDM16 and EHMT1 onto their promoter/enhancer regions. These results suggest a mechanism by which repression of obesity-associated adipose tissue fibrosis through the PRDM16 complex leads to an improvement in systemic glucose homeostasis.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Cell metabolism
Volume
27
Issue
1
Number of Pages
180-194.e6
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1932-7420
DOI
10.1016/j.cmet.2017.12.005
Alternate Journal
Cell Metab.
PMID
29320702
PMCID
PMC5765755
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