Skip to main content

Identification of Insulin-Responsive Transcription Factors That Regulate Glucose Production by Hepatocytes.

Citation
Wang, L., et al. “Identification Of Insulin-Responsive Transcription Factors That Regulate Glucose Production By Hepatocytes.”. Diabetes, pp. 1156-1167.
Center Columbia University
Author Liheng Wang, Qiongming Liu, Takumi Kitamoto, Junjie Hou, Jun Qin, Domenico Accili
Abstract

Hepatocyte glucose production is a complex process that integrates cell-autonomous mechanisms with cellular signaling, enzyme activity modulation, and gene transcription. Transcriptional mechanisms controlling glucose production are redundant and involve nuclear hormone receptors and unliganded transcription factors (TFs). Our knowledge of this circuitry is incomplete. Here we used DNA affinity purification followed by mass spectrometry to probe the network of hormone-regulated TFs by using phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase () and glucose-6-phosphatase () in liver and primary hepatocytes as model systems. The repertoire of insulin-regulated TFs is unexpectedly broad and diverse. Whereas in liver the two test promoters are regulated by largely overlapping sets of TFs, in primary hepatocytes and regulation diverges. Insulin treatment preferentially results in increased occupancy by the two promoters, consistent with a model in which the hormone's primary role is to recruit corepressors rather than to clear activators. Nine insulin-responsive TFs are present in both models, but only FoxK1, FoxA2, ZFP91, and ZHX3 require an intact insulin response sequence for binding. Knockdown of FoxK1 in primary hepatocytes decreased both glucose production and insulin's ability to suppress it. The findings expand the repertoire of insulin-dependent TFs and identify FoxK1 as a contributor to insulin signaling.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Diabetes
Volume
68
Issue
6
Number of Pages
1156-1167
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1939-327X
DOI
10.2337/db18-1236
Alternate Journal
Diabetes
PMID
30936148
PMCID
PMC6610019
Download citation