Deakin University
Browse

AgRP Neurons Require Carnitine Acetyltransferase to Regulate Metabolic Flexibility and Peripheral Nutrient Partitioning

Download (5.34 MB)
Version 2 2024-06-04, 03:33
Version 1 2018-06-12, 11:14
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 03:33 authored by A Reichenbach, R Stark, M Mequinion, RRG Denis, JF Goularte, RE Clarke, SH Lockie, MB Lemus, Greg KowalskiGreg Kowalski, Clinton BruceClinton Bruce, C Huang, RB Schittenhelm, RL Mynatt, BJ Oldfield, MJ Watt, S Luquet, ZB Andrews
AgRP neurons control peripheral substrate utilization and nutrient partitioning during conditions of energy deficit and nutrient replenishment, although the molecular mechanism is unknown. We examined whether carnitine acetyltransferase (Crat) in AgRP neurons affects peripheral nutrient partitioning. Crat deletion in AgRP neurons reduced food intake and feeding behavior and increased glycerol supply to the liver during fasting, as a gluconeogenic substrate, which was mediated by changes to sympathetic output and peripheral fatty acid metabolism in the liver. Crat deletion in AgRP neurons increased peripheral fatty acid substrate utilization and attenuated the switch to glucose utilization after refeeding, indicating altered nutrient partitioning. Proteomic analysis in AgRP neurons shows that Crat regulates protein acetylation and metabolic processing. Collectively, our studies highlight that AgRP neurons require Crat to provide the metabolic flexibility to optimize nutrient partitioning and regulate peripheral substrate utilization, particularly during fasting and refeeding.

History

Journal

Cell Reports

Volume

22

Pagination

1745-1759

Location

United States

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2211-1247

eISSN

2211-1247

Language

English

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, The Authors

Issue

7

Publisher

CELL PRESS