Hepatic AQP9 expression in male rats is reduced in response to PPARα agonist treatment.

Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol

Department of Biomedicine, Health, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark; and.

Published: February 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • PPARα is important for regulating how the liver responds to fasting by affecting lipid and carbohydrate metabolism, as well as glycerol metabolism.
  • During fasting, AQP9, a protein that helps the liver absorb glycerol, is increased; however, insulin decreases its expression in male rodents.
  • The study shows that activating PPARα using agonists reduces AQP9 levels in the liver and influences enzymes involved in glycerol metabolism, suggesting that PPARα promotes using glycerol for lipid synthesis instead of converting it to glucose when food is available.

Article Abstract

The peroxisome proliferator receptor α (PPARα) is a key regulator of the hepatic response to fasting with effects on both lipid and carbohydrate metabolism. A role in hepatic glycerol metabolism has also been found; however, the results are somewhat contradictive. Aquaporin 9 (AQP9) is a pore-forming transmembrane protein that facilitates hepatic uptake of glycerol. Its expression is inversely regulated by insulin in male rodents, with increased expression during fasting. Previous results indicate that PPARα plays a crucial role in the induction of AQP9 mRNA during fasting. In the present study, we use PPARα agonists to explore the effect of PPARα activation on hepatic AQP9 expression and on the abundance of enzymes involved in glycerol metabolism using both in vivo and in vitro systems. In male rats with free access to food, treatment with the PPARα agonist WY 14643 (3 mg·kg(-1)·day(-1)) caused a 50% reduction in hepatic AQP9 abundance with the effect being restricted to AQP9 expressed in periportal hepatocytes. The pharmacological activation of PPARα had no effect on the abundance of GlyK, whereas it caused an increased expression of hepatic GPD1, GPAT1, and L-FABP protein. In WIF-B9 and HepG2 hepatocytes, both WY 14643 and another PPARα agonist GW 7647 reduced the abundance of AQP9 protein. In conclusion, pharmacological PPARα activation results in a marked reduction in the abundance of AQP9 in periportal hepatocytes. Together with the effect on the enzymatic apparatus for glycerol metabolism, our results suggest that PPARα activation in the fed state directs glycerol into glycerolipid synthesis rather than into de novo synthesis of glucose.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpgi.00407.2013DOI Listing

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