| Literature DB >> 32994275 |
Heng Fan1, Yujie Zhang1, Jun Zhang2, Qiyuan Yao3, Yongfeng Song4, Qiwei Shen3, Jun Lin5, Yuanxu Gao6, Xiuyun Wang7,8, Lei Zhang1, Yinliang Zhang1, Pingsheng Liu9, Jiajun Zhao4, Qinghua Cui6, John Zhong Li10,8, Yongsheng Chang11.
Abstract
Promoting development and function of brown and beige fat may represent an attractive treatment of obesity. In the current study, we show that fat Klf9 expression is markedly induced by cold exposure and a β-adrenergic agonist. Moreover, Klf9 expression levels in human white adipose tissue (WAT) are inversely correlated with adiposity, and Klf9 overexpression in primary fat cells stimulates cellular thermogenesis, which is Ucp1 dependent. Fat-specific Klf9 transgenic mice gain less weight and have smaller fat pads due to increased thermogenesis of brown and beige fat. Moreover, Klf9 transgenic mice displayed lower fasting blood glucose levels and improved glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity under the high-fat diet condition. Conversely, Klf9 mutation in brown adipocytes reduces the expression of thermogenic genes, causing a reduction in cellular respiration. Klf9-mutant mice exhibited obesity and cold sensitivity due to impairments in the thermogenic function of fat. Finally, fat Klf9 deletion inhibits the β3 agonist-mediated induction of WAT browning and brown adipose tissue thermogenesis. Mechanistically, cold-inducible Klf9 stimulates expression of Pgc1α, a master regulator of fat thermogenesis, by a direct binding to its gene promoter region, subsequently promoting energy expenditure. The current study reveals a critical role for KLF9 in mediating thermogenesis of brown and beige fat.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32994275 DOI: 10.2337/db19-1153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461