Aims/hypothesis
Regulation of glyceroneogenesis and its key enzyme cytosolic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK-C) plays a major role
in the control of fatty acid release from adipose tissue. Here we investigate the effect of rosiglitazone on the expression
of genes involved in fatty acid metabolism and the resulting metabolic consequences.
Materials and methods
Rosiglitazone was administered to Zucker fa/fa rats for 4 days and to 24 diabetic patients for 12 weeks, then mRNA expression for the genes encoding PEPCK-C, mitochondrial
PEPCK, adipocyte lipid-binding protein, glycerol kinase, lipoprotein lipase and glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was examined
in s.c. adipose tissue by real-time RT-PCR. Glyceroneogenesis was determined using [1−14C]pyruvate incorporation into lipids. Cultured adipose tissue explants from overweight women undergoing plastic surgery were
incubated with rosiglitazone for various times before mRNA determination and analysis of PEPCK-C protein, activity and glyceroneogenesis.
Results
Rosiglitazone administration to rats induced the expression of the gene encoding PEPCK-C mRNA (PCK1) and PEPCK-C activity in adipose tissue with a resulting 2.5-fold increase in glyceroneogenesis. This was accompanied by
an improvement in dyslipidaemia as demonstrated by the decrease in plasma NEFAs and triacylglycerol. In rosiglitazone-treated
diabetic patients, PCK1 mRNA was raised 2.5-fold in s.c. adipose tissue. Rosiglitazone treatment of adipose tissue explants from overweight women
caused a selective augmentation in PCK1 mRNA which reached a maximum of 9-fold at 14 h, while mRNA for other genes remained unaffected. Experiments with inhibitors
showed a direct and transcription-only effect, which was followed by an increase in PEPCK-C protein, enzyme activity and glyceroneogenesis.
Conclusions/interpretation
These results favour adipocyte glyceroneogenesis as the initial thiazolidinedione-responsive pathway leading to improvement
in dyslipidaemia.
Keywords Adipose tissue - Fatty acids - Glyceroneogenesis - Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase - Re-esterification - Type 2 diabetes