Amoasii Leonela, Holland William, Sanchez-Ortiz Efrain, Baskin Kedryn K, Pearson Mackenzie, Burgess Shawn C, Nelson Benjamin R, Bassel-Duby Rhonda, Olson Eric N
Department of Molecular Biology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390, USA; Hamon Center for Regenerative Science and Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390, USA; Senator Paul D. Wellstone Muscular Dystrophy Cooperative Research Center, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390, USA;
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390, USA;
Genes Dev. 2016 Feb 15;30(4):434-46. doi: 10.1101/gad.273128.115.
The Mediator complex governs gene expression by linking upstream signaling pathways with the basal transcriptional machinery. However, how individual Mediator subunits may function in different tissues remains to be investigated. Through skeletal muscle-specific deletion of the Mediator subunit MED13 in mice, we discovered a gene regulatory mechanism by which skeletal muscle modulates the response of the liver to a high-fat diet. Skeletal muscle-specific deletion of MED13 in mice conferred resistance to hepatic steatosis by activating a metabolic gene program that enhances muscle glucose uptake and storage as glycogen. The consequent insulin-sensitizing effect within skeletal muscle lowered systemic glucose and insulin levels independently of weight gain and adiposity and prevented hepatic lipid accumulation. MED13 suppressed the expression of genes involved in glucose uptake and metabolism in skeletal muscle by inhibiting the nuclear receptor NURR1 and the MEF2 transcription factor. These findings reveal a fundamental molecular mechanism for the governance of glucose metabolism and the control of hepatic lipid accumulation by skeletal muscle. Intriguingly, MED13 exerts opposing metabolic actions in skeletal muscle and the heart, highlighting the customized, tissue-specific functions of the Mediator complex.
中介体复合物通过将上游信号通路与基础转录机制联系起来调控基因表达。然而,单个中介体亚基在不同组织中如何发挥作用仍有待研究。通过在小鼠中骨骼肌特异性缺失中介体亚基MED13,我们发现了一种基因调控机制,即骨骼肌可调节肝脏对高脂饮食的反应。小鼠骨骼肌特异性缺失MED13通过激活一个代谢基因程序赋予了对肝脂肪变性的抗性,该程序可增强肌肉对葡萄糖的摄取并将其储存为糖原。随之而来的骨骼肌内胰岛素增敏作用独立于体重增加和肥胖降低了全身葡萄糖和胰岛素水平,并防止了肝脏脂质积累。MED13通过抑制核受体NURR1和MEF2转录因子来抑制骨骼肌中参与葡萄糖摄取和代谢的基因的表达。这些发现揭示了骨骼肌调控葡萄糖代谢和控制肝脏脂质积累的基本分子机制。有趣的是,MED13在骨骼肌和心脏中发挥相反的代谢作用,突出了中介体复合物定制化的、组织特异性功能。