AI Article Synopsis

  • Transcripts of enzymes in the Leloir pathway, especially GALE, are boosted in mouse livers after high-fat/high-sucrose diets, suggesting a connection between galactose and glucose metabolism amid liver stress.
  • Overexpressing GALE in the liver increases gluconeogenesis, leading to worse glucose tolerance, while reducing GALE levels improves glucose tolerance.
  • Transcriptional profiling shows trefoil factor 3 as a downstream target of GALE, and restoring its expression helps fix glucose intolerance in mice with high GALE levels.

Article Abstract

Transcripts of key enzymes in the Leloir pathway of galactose metabolism in mouse livers are significantly increased after chronic high-fat/high-sucrose feeding. UDP-galactose-4-epimerase (GALE) is the last enzyme in this pathway that converts UDP-galactose to UDP-glucose and was previously identified as a downstream target of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress effector spliced X-box binding protein 1, suggesting an interesting cross talk between galactose and glucose metabolism in the context of hepatic ER stress and whole-body metabolic fitness. However, its specific role in glucose metabolism is not established. Using an inducible and tissue-specific mouse model, we report that hepatic overexpression of increases gluconeogenesis from pyruvate and impairs glucose tolerance. Conversely, genetic reduction of in liver improves glucose tolerance. Transcriptional profiling identifies trefoil factor 3 () as one of the downstream targets of GALE. Restoration of expression corrects glucose intolerance in -overexpressing mice. These studies reveal a new link between hepatic GALE activity and whole-body glucose homeostasis via regulation of hepatic expression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5652600PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db17-0323DOI Listing

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