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MondoA drives muscle lipid accumulation and insulin resistance
Byungyong Ahn, … , Kyoung Jae Won, Daniel P. Kelly
Byungyong Ahn, … , Kyoung Jae Won, Daniel P. Kelly
Published July 9, 2019
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2019;4(15):e129119. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.129119.
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Research Article Metabolism Muscle biology

MondoA drives muscle lipid accumulation and insulin resistance

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Abstract

Obesity-related insulin resistance is associated with intramyocellular lipid accumulation in skeletal muscle. We hypothesized that contrary to current dogma, this linkage is related to an upstream mechanism that coordinately regulates both processes. We demonstrate that the muscle-enriched transcription factor MondoA is glucose/fructose responsive in human skeletal myotubes and directs the transcription of genes in cellular metabolic pathways involved in diversion of energy substrate from a catabolic fate into nutrient storage pathways, including fatty acid desaturation and elongation, triacylglyceride (TAG) biosynthesis, glycogen storage, and hexosamine biosynthesis. MondoA also reduces myocyte glucose uptake by suppressing insulin signaling. Mice with muscle-specific MondoA deficiency were partially protected from insulin resistance and muscle TAG accumulation in the context of diet-induced obesity. These results identify MondoA as a nutrient-regulated transcription factor that under normal physiological conditions serves a dynamic checkpoint function to prevent excess energy substrate flux into muscle catabolic pathways when myocyte nutrient balance is positive. However, in conditions of chronic caloric excess, this mechanism becomes persistently activated, leading to progressive myocyte lipid storage and insulin resistance.

Authors

Byungyong Ahn, Shibiao Wan, Natasha Jaiswal, Rick B. Vega, Donald E. Ayer, Paul M. Titchenell, Xianlin Han, Kyoung Jae Won, Daniel P. Kelly

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Figure 4

Loss of MondoA improves HFD-induced glucose tolerance and insulin resistance.

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Loss of MondoA improves HFD-induced glucose tolerance and insulin resist...
(A) Body weight of WT and muscle-specific MondoA-deficient (msKO) mice fed chow diet (CD) or 60% fat HFD for 16 weeks (n = 8–10 mice per group). (B) Glucose tolerance test (GTT) following glucose injection (1 g/kg, i.p.) after a 5-hour fast. AUC for the GTT is also shown (right of graph). (C) Results of insulin tolerance test (ITT) following insulin injection (0.75 U/kg, i.p.) after a 5-hour fast. Data represent the mean ± SEM. (D) Fasting plasma insulin and (E) fasting blood glucose. Data represent mean ± SEM. *P < 0.05 vs. WT/CD, and †P < 0.05 vs. WT/HFD by 1-way or 2-way (blood glucose graphs in B and C) ANOVA with Tukey’s multiple-comparisons post hoc test.

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