| Literature DB >> 20074523 |
J Andrew Pospisilik1, Daniel Schramek, Harald Schnidar, Shane J F Cronin, Nadine T Nehme, Xiaoyun Zhang, Claude Knauf, Patrice D Cani, Karin Aumayr, Jelena Todoric, Martina Bayer, Arvand Haschemi, Vijitha Puviindran, Krisztina Tar, Michael Orthofer, G Gregory Neely, Georg Dietzl, Armen Manoukian, Martin Funovics, Gerhard Prager, Oswald Wagner, Dominique Ferrandon, Fritz Aberger, Chi-chung Hui, Harald Esterbauer, Josef M Penninger.
Abstract
Over 1 billion people are estimated to be overweight, placing them at risk for diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer. We performed a systems-level genetic dissection of adiposity regulation using genome-wide RNAi screening in adult Drosophila. As a follow-up, the resulting approximately 500 candidate obesity genes were functionally classified using muscle-, oenocyte-, fat-body-, and neuronal-specific knockdown in vivo and revealed hedgehog signaling as the top-scoring fat-body-specific pathway. To extrapolate these findings into mammals, we generated fat-specific hedgehog-activation mutant mice. Intriguingly, these mice displayed near total loss of white, but not brown, fat compartments. Mechanistically, activation of hedgehog signaling irreversibly blocked differentiation of white adipocytes through direct, coordinate modulation of early adipogenic factors. These findings identify a role for hedgehog signaling in white/brown adipocyte determination and link in vivo RNAi-based scanning of the Drosophila genome to regulation of adipocyte cell fate in mammals.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20074523 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2009.12.027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582