Kodama Susumu, Koike Chika, Negishi Masahiko, Yamamoto Yukio
Pharmacogenetics Section, Laboratory of Reproductive and Developmental Toxicology, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709, USA.
Mol Cell Biol. 2004 Sep;24(18):7931-40. doi: 10.1128/MCB.24.18.7931-7940.2004.
The nuclear receptors CAR and PXR activate hepatic genes in response to therapeutic drugs and xenobiotics, leading to the induction of drug-metabolizing enzymes, such as cytochrome P450. Insulin inhibits the ability of FOXO1 to express genes encoding gluconeogenic enzymes. Induction by drugs is known to be decreased by insulin, whereas gluconeogenic activity is often repressed by treatment with certain drugs, such as phenobarbital (PB). Performing cell-based transfection assays with drug-responsive and insulin-responsive enhancers, glutathione S-transferase pull down, RNA interference (RNAi), and mouse primary hepatocytes, we examined the molecular mechanism by which nuclear receptors and FOXO1 could coordinately regulate both enzyme pathways. FOXO1 was found to be a coactivator to CAR- and PXR-mediated transcription. In contrast, CAR and PXR, acting as corepressors, downregulated FOXO1-mediated transcription in the presence of their activators, such as 1,4-bis[2-(3,5-dichloropyridyloxy)]benzene (TCPOBOP) and pregnenolone 16alpha-carbonitrile, respectively. A constitutively active mutant of the insulin-responsive protein kinase Akt, but not the kinase-negative mutant, effectively blocked FOXO1 activity in cell-based assays. Thus, insulin could repress the receptors by activating the Akt-FOXO1 signal, whereas drugs could interfere with FOXO1-mediated transcription by activating CAR and/or PXR. Treatment with TCPOBOP or PB decreased the levels of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase 1 mRNA in mice but not in Car(-/-) mice. We conclude that FOXO1 and the nuclear receptors reciprocally coregulate their target genes, modulating both drug metabolism and gluconeogenesis.
核受体CAR和PXR可响应治疗性药物和外源性物质激活肝脏基因,从而诱导药物代谢酶(如细胞色素P450)的产生。胰岛素可抑制FOXO1表达糖异生酶编码基因的能力。已知药物诱导作用会因胰岛素而减弱,而某些药物(如苯巴比妥,PB)的治疗常可抑制糖异生活性。通过使用药物反应性和胰岛素反应性增强子进行基于细胞的转染实验、谷胱甘肽S-转移酶下拉实验、RNA干扰(RNAi)以及小鼠原代肝细胞实验,我们研究了核受体和FOXO1能够协同调节这两种酶途径的分子机制。结果发现FOXO1是CAR和PXR介导转录的共激活因子。相反,CAR和PXR作为共抑制因子,在分别存在其激活剂(如1,4-双[2-(3,5-二氯吡啶氧基)]苯,TCPOBOP和孕烯醇酮16α-腈)的情况下,下调FOXO1介导的转录。胰岛素反应性蛋白激酶Akt的组成型活性突变体而非激酶阴性突变体,在基于细胞的实验中有效阻断了FOXO1活性。因此,胰岛素可通过激活Akt-FOXO1信号来抑制这些受体,而药物可通过激活CAR和/或PXR干扰FOXO1介导的转录。用TCPOBOP或PB处理可降低小鼠磷酸烯醇式丙酮酸羧激酶1 mRNA的水平,但对Car(-/-)小鼠无效。我们得出结论,FOXO1和核受体相互共同调节其靶基因,从而调节药物代谢和糖异生。