| Literature DB >> 31275349 |
Paula Ortega-Prieto1, Catherine Postic1.
Abstract
Carbohydrate response element binding protein (ChREBP) is a carbohydrate-signaling transcription factor that in the past years has emerged as a central metabolic regulator. ChREBP expression is mostly abundant in active sites of de novo lipogenesis including liver and white and brown adipose tissues. ChREBP is also expressed in pancreatic islets, small intestine and to a lesser extent in the kidney and the brain. In response to glucose, ChREBP undergoes several post-translational modifications (PTMs) (phosphorylation, acetylation and/or O-GlcNAcylation) that will either modulate its cellular location, stability and/or its transcriptional activity. ChREBPβ is a shorter isoform of ChREBP that was first described in adipose tissue and later found to be expressed in other sites including liver and pancreatic β cells. ChREBPβ lacks an important regulatory inhibitory domain, known as LID (low glucose inhibitory domain), in its N-terminal domain and is therefore reported as a highly active isoform. In this review, we recapitulate a recent progress concerning the mechanisms governing the activity of the ChREBP isoforms, including PTMs, partners/cofactors as well as novel metabolic pathways regulated by ChREBP in key metabolic tissues, by discussing phenotypes associated with tissue-specific deletion of ChREBP in knockout mice.Entities:
Keywords: ChREBP; carbohydrate sensing; insulin sensitivity; metabolism; transcriptional regulation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31275349 PMCID: PMC6593282 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2019.00472
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
FIGURE 1(A) Structure of carbohydrate response element binding protein α (ChREBPα). ChREBPα is composed of 864 amino acids and contains several regulatory domains. At the N-terminus the protein contains a glucose-sensing module composed of the low glucose inhibitory domain (LID) and the glucose activated conserved element (GRACE). The protein also contains a polyproline-rich, a bHLH/LZ and a leucine-zipper-like (Zip-like) domain located at the C-terminus. Post-translational modifications are indicated in their respective residues, phosphorylation (red), acetylation (blue) and the recently identified O-GlcNAcylations (green). (B) Gene structure of the ChREBP gene and generation of the two ChREBP isoforms α and β. ChREBPβ is transcribed from an alternative first exon promoter 1b. This transcript is translated from exon 4 generating a shorter protein of 687 amino acids in which the two NES, the NLS and the LID domain are missing. The ChREBPβ isoform has been suggested to be directly regulated by ChREBPα since a ChoRE sequence was identified in the exon promoter 1b. Whether both ChREBP α and β isoforms both bind to the ChoRE is currently not known. Figure adapted from Herman et al. (2012). (C) Multi-alignment of ChoRE consensus sequences presents in several ChREBP target gene promoters. Nucleotides-based alignment is presented on the top of the figure together with the consensus sequence ChoRE described in Poungvarin et al. (2015). The logo corresponding to the consensus sequence associated to this particular alignment is also represented.
FIGURE 2ChREBP regulates multiples signaling/metabolic pathways in response to glucose and fructose. ChREBP is expressed in several tissues including intestine, liver and white adipose tissue. In these cell types, in response to glucose and/or fructose ChREBP is activated and induces specific genic program as indicated on the figure. In intestine, stimulation of SI, Glut5, Glut2 and Ketohexokinase (Khk) expression by ChREBP (either directly or indirectly) was described to improve sucrose tolerance and fructose absorption. In liver, ChREBP is a key modulator of glycolytic, lipogenic and microsomal triglyceride transfer protein (Mttp) gene expression, thereby controlling both fatty acid accumulation and VLDL export from the liver. ChREBP is also regulates the production of hepatokines such as fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21). This liver-to-brain axis expands liver ChREBP function from a hepatic regulator to a systemic modulator affecting not only substrate handling in liver but also nutrient preference. ChREBP activation in white adipose tissue is linked to improved metabolic homeostasis by producing protective circulating signals. A novel class of mammalian lipids characterized by a branched ester linkage between a fatty acid and a hydroxy-fatty acid (palmitic acid hydroxyl stearic acid) was reported to exert beneficial effects on glucose homeostasis through direct and incretin-mediated modulation of β cell function, enhanced adipose glucose uptake and reduced inflammation. Interestingly, mTORC2 was recently identified as a novel regulator of ChREBPβ isoform in adipose cells.