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

Citation
Hasegawa, Yutaka, et al. “Repression of Adipose Tissue Fibrosis through a PRDM16-GTF2IRD1 Complex Improves Systemic Glucose Homeostasis”. 2018. Cell Metabolism, vol. 27, no. 1, 2018, 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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