首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Involvement of SIK3 in glucose and lipid homeostasis in mice
Authors:Uebi Tatsuya  Itoh Yumi  Hatano Osamu  Kumagai Ayako  Sanosaka Masato  Sasaki Tsutomu  Sasagawa Satoru  Doi Junko  Tatsumi Keita  Mitamura Kuniko  Morii Eiichi  Aozasa Katsuyuki  Kawamura Tomohiro  Okumura Meinoshin  Nakae Jun  Takikawa Hajime  Fukusato Toshio  Koura Minako  Nish Mayumi  Hamsten Anders  Silveira Angela  Bertorello Alejandro M  Kitagawa Kazuo  Nagaoka Yasuo  Kawahara Hidehisa  Tomonaga Takeshi  Naka Tetsuji  Ikegawa Shigeo  Tsumaki Noriyuki  Matsuda Junichiro  Takemori Hiroshi
Institution:Laboratory of Cell Signaling and Metabolic Disease, National Institute of Biomedical Innovation, Ibaraki, Osaka, Japan.
Abstract:Salt-inducible kinase 3 (SIK3), an AMP-activated protein kinase-related kinase, is induced in the murine liver after the consumption of a diet rich in fat, sucrose, and cholesterol. To examine whether SIK3 can modulate glucose and lipid metabolism in the liver, we analyzed phenotypes of SIK3-deficent mice. Sik3(-/-) mice have a malnourished the phenotype (i.e., lipodystrophy, hypolipidemia, hypoglycemia, and hyper-insulin sensitivity) accompanied by cholestasis and cholelithiasis. The hypoglycemic and hyper-insulin-sensitive phenotypes may be due to reduced energy storage, which is represented by the low expression levels of mRNA for components of the fatty acid synthesis pathways in the liver. The biliary disorders in Sik3(-/-) mice are associated with the dysregulation of gene expression programs that respond to nutritional stresses and are probably regulated by nuclear receptors. Retinoic acid plays a role in cholesterol and bile acid homeostasis, wheras ALDH1a which produces retinoic acid, is expressed at low levels in Sik3(-/-) mice. Lipid metabolism disorders in Sik3(-/-) mice are ameliorated by the treatment with 9-cis-retinoic acid. In conclusion, SIK3 is a novel energy regulator that modulates cholesterol and bile acid metabolism by coupling with retinoid metabolism, and may alter the size of energy storage in mice.
Keywords:
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号