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Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARalpha) is a nuclear receptor activated by fatty acids, hypolipidemic drugs, and peroxisome proliferators (PPs). Like other nuclear receptors, PPARalpha is a phosphoprotein whose activity is affected by a variety of growth factor signaling cascades. In this study, the effects of protein kinase C (PKC) on PPARalpha activity were explored. In vivo phosphorylation studies in COS-1 cells transfected with murine PPARalpha showed that the level of phosphorylated PPARalpha is increased by treatment with the PP Wy-14,643 as well as the PKC activator phorbol myristol acetate (PMA). In addition, inhibitors of PKC decreased Wy-14,643-induced PPARalpha activity in a variety of reporter assays. Overexpressing PKCalpha, -beta, -delta, and -zeta affected both basal and Wy-14,643-induced PPARalpha activity. Four consensus PKC phosphorylation sites are contained within the DNA binding (C-domain) and hinge (D-domain) regions of rat PPARalpha (S110, T129, S142, and S179), and their contribution to receptor function was examined. Mutation of T129 or S179 to alanine prevented heterodimerization of PPARalpha with RXRalpha, lowered the level of phosphorylation by PKCalpha and PKCdelta in vitro, and lowered the level of phosphorylation of transfected PPARalpha in transfected cells. In addition, the T129A mutation prevented PPARalpha from binding DNA in an electromobility shift assay. Together, these studies demonstrate a direct role for PKC in the regulation of PPARalpha, and suggest several PKCs can regulate PPARalpha activity through multiple phosphorylation sites.  相似文献   

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Amides of fatty acids with ethanolamine (FAE) are biologically active lipids that participate in a variety of biological functions, including the regulation of feeding. The polyunsaturated FAE anandamide (arachidonoylethanolamide) increases food intake by activating G protein-coupled cannabinoid receptors. On the other hand, the monounsaturated FAE oleoylethanolamide (OEA) reduces feeding and body weight gain by activating the nuclear receptor PPAR-alpha (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha). In the present report, we examined whether OEA can also influence energy utilization. OEA (1-20 microm) stimulated glycerol and fatty acid release from freshly dissociated rat adipocytes in a concentration-dependent and structurally selective manner. Under the same conditions, OEA had no effect on glucose uptake or oxidation. OEA enhanced fatty acid oxidation in skeletal muscle strips, dissociated hepatocytes, and primary cardiomyocyte cultures. Administration of OEA in vivo (5 mg kg(-1), intraperitoneally) produced lipolysis in both rats and wild-type mice, but not in mice in which PPAR-alpha had been deleted by homologous recombination (PPAR-alpha(-/-)). Likewise, OEA was unable to enhance lipolysis in adipocytes or stimulate fatty acid oxidation in skeletal muscle strips isolated from PPAR-alpha mice. The synthetic PPAR-alpha agonist Wy-14643 produced similar effects, which also were dependent on the presence of PPAR-alpha. Subchronic treatment with OEA reduced body weight gain and triacylglycerol content in liver and adipose tissue of diet-induced obese rats and wild-type mice, but not in obese PPAR-alpha(-/-) mice. The results suggest that OEA stimulates fat utilization through activation of PPAR-alpha and that this effect may contribute to its anti-obesity actions.  相似文献   

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The control of ubiquinone biosynthesis by peroxisome proliferators was investigated using peroxisome proliferator activated receptor alpha (PPARalpha)-null mice. Administration of 2-(diethylhexyl)phthalate to control mice resulted in elevated ubiquinone levels in the liver, while dolichol, dolichyl-P and cholesterol concentrations remained unchanged. In PPARalpha-null mice, the level of these lipids were similar to control levels and administration of the peroxisome proliferator did not increase the levels of ubiquinone. The increase in ubiquinone levels was the result of increased synthesis. Induction was most pronounced in liver, kidney and heart, which have relatively high levels of PPARalpha. When the tissue concentration of hydrogen peroxide was elevated by inhibition of catalase activity with aminotriazole, the amount of ubiquinone was not increased, suggesting that the induction of ubiquinone synthesis occured through a direct mechanism. The activities of branch-point enzymes FPP-synthase, squalene synthase, cis-prenyltransferase, trans-prenyltransferase and NPHB-transferase were substantially increased in control but not in PPARalpha-null mice after treatment with peroxisome proliferators. These data suggest that the induction of ubiquinone biosynthesis after administration of peroxisome proliferators is dependent on the PPARalpha through regulation of some of the mevalonate pathway enzymes.  相似文献   

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Phytanic acid and pristanic acid are branched-chain fatty acids, present at micromolar concentrations in the plasma of healthy individuals. Here we show that both phytanic acid and pristanic acid activate the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARalpha) in a concentration-dependent manner. Activation is observed via the ligand-binding domain of PPARalpha as well as via a PPAR response element (PPRE). Via the PPRE significant induction is found with both phytanic acid and pristanic acid at concentrations of 3 and 1 microM, respectively. The trans-activation of PPARdelta and PPARgamma by these two ligands is negligible. Besides PPARalpha, phytanic acid also trans-activates all three retinoic X receptor subtypes in a concentration-dependent manner. In primary human fibroblasts, deficient in phytanic acid alpha-oxidation, trans-activation through PPARalpha by phytanic acid is observed. This clearly demonstrates that phytanic acid itself, and not only its metabolite, pristanic acid, is a true physiological ligand for PPARalpha. Because induction of PPARalpha occurs at ligand concentrations comparable to the levels found for phytanic acid and pristanic acid in human plasma, these fatty acids should be seen as naturally occurring ligands for PPARalpha.These results demonstrate that both pristanic acid and phytanic acid are naturally occurring ligands for PPARalpha, which are present at physiological concentrations.  相似文献   

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In mice and other sensitive species, PPARalpha mediates the induction of mitochondrial, microsomal, and peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation, peroxisome proliferation, liver enlargement, and tumors by peroxisome proliferators. In order to identify PPARalpha-responsive human genes, HepG2 cells were engineered to express PPARalpha at concentrations similar to mouse liver. This resulted in the dramatic induction of mRNAs encoding the mitochondrial HMG-CoA synthase and increases in fatty acyl-CoA synthetase (3-8-fold) and carnitine palmitoyl-CoA transferase IA (2-4-fold) mRNAs that were dependent on PPARalpha expression and enhanced by exposure to the PPARalpha agonist Wy14643. A PPAR response element was identified in the proximal promoter of the human HMG-CoA synthase gene that is functional in its native context. These data suggest that humans retain a capacity for PPARalpha regulation of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation and ketogenesis. Human liver is refractory to peroxisome proliferation, and increased expression of mRNAs for the peroxisomal fatty acyl-CoA oxidase, bifunctional enzyme, or thiolase, which accompanies peroxisome proliferation in responsive species, was not evident following Wy14643 treatment of cells expressing elevated levels of PPARalpha. Additionally, no significant differences were seen for the expression of apolipoprotein AI, AII, or CIII; medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase; or stearoyl-CoA desaturase mRNAs.  相似文献   

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The recent demonstrations that cyclooxygenase-2 and leukocyte-type 12-lipoxygenase (LOX) efficiently oxygenate 2-arachidonylglycerol (2-AG) prompted an investigation into related oxygenases capable of metabolizing this endogenous cannabinoid receptor ligand. We evaluated the ability of six LOXs to catalyze the hydroperoxidation of 2-AG. Soybean 15-LOX, rabbit reticulocyte 15-LOX, human 15-LOX-1, and human 15-LOX-2 oxygenate 2-AG, providing 15(S)-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid glyceryl ester. In contrast, potato and human 5-LOXs do not efficiently metabolize this endocannabinoid. Among a series of structurally related arachidonyl esters, arachidonylglycerols serve as the preferred substrates for 15-LOXs. Steady-state kinetic analysis demonstrates that both 15-LOX-1 and 15-LOX-2 oxygenate 2-AG comparably or preferably to arachidonic acid. Furthermore, 2-AG treatment of COS-7 cells transiently transfected with human 15-LOX expression vectors or normal human epidermal keratinocytes results in the production and extracellular release of 15-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid glyceryl ester (15-HETE-G), establishing that lipoxygenase metabolism of 2-AG occurs in an eukaryotic cellular environment. Investigations into the potential biological actions of 15-HETE-G indicate that this lipid, in contrast to its free-acid counterpart, acts as a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha agonist. The results demonstrate that 15-LOXs are capable of acting on 2-AG to provide 15-HETE-G and elucidate a potential role for endocannabinoid oxygenation in the generation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha agonists.  相似文献   

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