L-carnitine exerts a nutrigenomic effect via direct modulation of nuclear receptor signaling in adipocytes, hepatocytes and SKMC, demonstrating its nutritional impact.

Nutr Res

Center for Medical Biochemistry, Division of Molecular Genetics, Max Perutz Labs, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; Center for Molecular Biology, Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Max Perutz Labs, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria. Electronic address:

Published: January 2021

L-carnitine is an indispensable metabolite facilitating the transport of fatty acids into the mitochondrial matrix and has been previously postulated to exert a nutrigenomic effect. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain mostly unclear. We hypothesized that L-carnitine interacts with nuclear receptors involved in metabolic regulation, thereby modulating downstream targets of cellular metabolism. Therefore, we investigated the effect of L-carnitine supplementation on protein activity, mRNA expression, and binding affinities of nuclear receptors as well as mRNA expression of downstream targets in skeletal muscle cells, hepatocytes, and differentiated adipocytes. L-carnitine supplementation to hepatocytes increased the protein activity of multiple nuclear receptors (RAR, RXR, VDR, PPAR, HNF4, ER, LXR). Diverging effects on the mRNA expression of PPAR-α, PPAR-δ, PPAR-γ, RAR-β, LXR-α, and RXR-α were observed in adipocytes, hepatocytes, and skeletal muscle cells. mRNA levels of PPAR-α, a key regulator of lipolysis and β-oxidation, were significantly upregulated, emphasizing a role of L-carnitine as a promoter of lipid catabolism. L-carnitine administration to hepatocytes modulated the transcription of key nuclear receptor target genes, including ALDH1A1, a promoter of adipogenesis, and OGT, a contributor to insulin resistance. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays proved L-carnitine to increase binding affinities of nuclear receptors to their promoter target sequences, suggesting a molecular mechanism for the observed transcriptional modulation. Overall, these findings indicate that L-carnitine modulates the activity and expression of nuclear receptors, thereby promoting lipolytic gene expression and decreasing transcription of target genes linked to adipogenesis and insulin resistance.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nutres.2020.11.003DOI Listing

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