Disruption of HIF-1 alpha in hepatocytes impairs glucose metabolism in diet-induced obesity mice

作者:Ochiai Daigo; Goda Nobuhito*; Hishiki Takako; Kanai Mai; Senoo Matsuda Nanami; Soga Tomoyoshi; Johnson Randall S; Yoshimura Yasunori; Suematsu Makoto
来源:Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 2011, 415(3): 445-449.
DOI:10.1016/j.bbrc.2011.10.089

摘要

The liver plays a central role in glucose homeostasis in the whole-body by responding to environmental factors including nutrients, hormones, and oxygen. In conditions of metabolic overload such as diabetes mellitus and obesity, coordinated regulation between oxygen supply and consumption has been reported to be disrupted and subsequently cause tissue hypoxia, although pathological significance of the disease-related hypoxia remains elusive. To investigate the role of tissue hypoxia in the liver on systemic glucose homeostasis, mice lacking HIF-1 alpha gene, a critical component of a master regulator of hypoxic response, in hepatocytes were exposed to high fat/sucrose diet (HFSD). Exposure to HFSD for 5 weeks elicited liver hypoxia with a transient increase in HIF-1 alpha protein expression in the liver of control mice. Glucose disposal was marginally impaired in control mice when challenged oral glucose tolerance test, but such impairment was enhanced in the mutant mice. This alteration was accompanied by a complete inhibition of glucokinase induction with a significant reduction of hepatic glucose uptake. Mice fed HFSD for 20 weeks exhibited fasting hyperglycemia and glucose intolerance, whereas these metabolic phenotypes deteriorated considerably with severe insulin resistance in skeletal muscles and adipose tissues in the mutant mice. These findings suggest that HIF-1 in hepatocytes plays protective roles against the progression of diabetes mellitus.

  • 出版日期2011-11-25