| Literature DB >> 22493257 |
Saptarsi M Haldar1, Darwin Jeyaraj, Priti Anand, Han Zhu, Yuan Lu, Domenick A Prosdocimo, Betty Eapen, Daiji Kawanami, Mitsuharu Okutsu, Leticia Brotto, Hisashi Fujioka, Janos Kerner, Mariana G Rosca, Owen P McGuinness, Rod J Snow, Aaron P Russell, Anthony N Gerber, Xiaodong Bai, Zhen Yan, Thomas M Nosek, Marco Brotto, Charles L Hoppel, Mukesh K Jain.
Abstract
The ability of skeletal muscle to enhance lipid utilization during exercise is a form of metabolic plasticity essential for survival. Conversely, metabolic inflexibility in muscle can cause organ dysfunction and disease. Although the transcription factor Kruppel-like factor 15 (KLF15) is an important regulator of glucose and amino acid metabolism, its endogenous role in lipid homeostasis and muscle physiology is unknown. Here we demonstrate that KLF15 is essential for skeletal muscle lipid utilization and physiologic performance. KLF15 directly regulates a broad transcriptional program spanning all major segments of the lipid-flux pathway in muscle. Consequently, Klf15-deficient mice have abnormal lipid and energy flux, excessive reliance on carbohydrate fuels, exaggerated muscle fatigue, and impaired endurance exercise capacity. Elucidation of this heretofore unrecognized role for KLF15 now implicates this factor as a central component of the transcriptional circuitry that coordinates physiologic flux of all three basic cellular nutrients: glucose, amino acids, and lipids.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22493257 PMCID: PMC3340075 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1121060109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205