| Literature DB >> 32989316 |
Denuja Karunakaran1,2,3, Adam W Turner4, Anne-Claire Duchez5, Sebastien Soubeyrand4, Adil Rasheed5, David Smyth6, David P Cook7, Majid Nikpay4, Joshua W Kandiah5, Calvin Pan8, Michele Geoffrion5, Richard Lee9, Ludovic Boytard10, Hailey Wyatt5, My-Anh Nguyen5, Paulina Lau4, Markku Laakso11, Bhama Ramkhelawon10, Marcus Alvarez12, Kirsi H Pietiläinen13, Päivi Pajukanta12, Barbara C Vanderhyden7, Peter Liu6, Scott B Berger14, Peter J Gough14, John Bertin14, Mary-Ellen Harper15, Aldons J Lusis8, Ruth McPherson4,15, Katey J Rayner16,17.
Abstract
Obesity is a major public health burden worldwide and is characterized by chronic low-grade inflammation driven by the cooperation of the innate immune system and dysregulated metabolism in adipose tissue and other metabolic organs. Receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase 1 (RIPK1) is a central regulator of inflammatory cell function that coordinates inflammation, apoptosis and necroptosis in response to inflammatory stimuli. Here we show that genetic polymorphisms near the human RIPK1 locus associate with increased RIPK1 gene expression and obesity. We show that one of these single nucleotide polymorphisms is within a binding site for E4BP4 and increases RIPK1 promoter activity and RIPK1 gene expression in adipose tissue. Therapeutic silencing of RIPK1 in vivo in a mouse model of diet-induced obesity dramatically reduces fat mass, total body weight and improves insulin sensitivity, while simultaneously reducing macrophage and promoting invariant natural killer T cell accumulation in adipose tissue. These findings demonstrate that RIPK1 is genetically associated with obesity, and reducing RIPK1 expression is a potential therapeutic approach to target obesity and related diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32989316 DOI: 10.1038/s42255-020-00279-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Metab ISSN: 2522-5812