| Literature DB >> 27621313 |
Xiaodong Yang1, John Mudgett2, Ghina Bou-About3, Marie-France Champy3, Hugues Jacobs3, Laurent Monassier4, Guillaume Pavlovic3, Tania Sorg3, Yann Herault3, Benoit Petit-Demoulière3, Ku Lu1, Wen Feng1, Hongwu Wang5, Li-Jun Ma1, Roger Askew2, Mark D Erion1, David E Kelley1, Robert W Myers1, Cai Li1, Hong-Ping Guan6.
Abstract
Mutations of the AMP-activated kinase gamma 2 subunit (AMPKγ2), N488I (AMPKγ2NI) and R531G (AMPKγ2RG), are associated with Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome, a cardiac disorder characterized by ventricular pre-excitation in humans. Cardiac-specific transgenic overexpression of human AMPKγ2NI or AMPKγ2RG leads to constitutive AMPK activation and the WPW phenotype in mice. However, overexpression of these mutant proteins also caused profound, non-physiological increase in cardiac glycogen, which might abnormally alter the true phenotype. To investigate whether physiological levels of AMPKγ2NI or AMPKγ2RG mutation cause WPW syndrome and metabolic changes in other organs, we generated two knock-in mouse lines on the C57BL/6N background harboring mutations of human AMPKγ2NI and AMPKγ2RG, respectively. Similar to the reported phenotypes of mice overexpressing AMPKγ2NI or AMPKγ2RG in the heart, both lines developed WPW syndrome and cardiac hypertrophy; however, these effects were independent of cardiac glycogen accumulation. Compared with AMPKγ2WT mice, AMPKγ2NI and AMPKγ2RG mice exhibited reduced body weight, fat mass, and liver steatosis when fed with a high fat diet (HFD). Surprisingly, AMPKγ2RG but not AMPKγ2NI mice fed with an HFD exhibited severe kidney injury characterized by glycogen accumulation, inflammation, apoptosis, cyst formation, and impaired renal function. These results demonstrate that expression of AMPKγ2NI and AMPKγ2RG mutations at physiological levels can induce beneficial metabolic effects but that this is accompanied by WPW syndrome. Our data also reveal an unexpected effect of AMPKγ2RG in the kidney, linking lifelong constitutive activation of AMPK to a potential risk for kidney dysfunction in the context of an HFD.Entities:
Keywords: AMP-activated kinase (AMPK); diabetes; glycogen storage disease; insulin resistance; kidney metabolism; liver metabolism
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27621313 PMCID: PMC5095399 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M116.738591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157