Cell Metabolism
Volume 14, Issue 4, 5 October 2011, Pages 516-527
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Article
Postprandial Hepatic Lipid Metabolism Requires Signaling through Akt2 Independent of the Transcription Factors FoxA2, FoxO1, and SREBP1c

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Summary

Under conditions of obesity and insulin resistance, the serine/threonine protein kinase Akt/PKB is required for lipid accumulation in liver. Two forkhead transcription factors, FoxA2 and FoxO1, have been suggested to function downstream of and to be negatively regulated by Akt and are proposed as key determinants of hepatic triglyceride content. In this study, we utilize genetic loss of function experiments to show that constitutive activation of neither FoxA2 nor FoxO1 can account for the protection from steatosis afforded by deletion of Akt2 in liver. Rather, another downstream target positively regulated by Akt, the mTORC1 complex, is required in vivo for de novo lipogenesis and Srebp1c expression. Nonetheless, activation of mTORC1 and SREBP1c is not sufficient to drive postprandial lipogenesis in the absence of Akt2. These data show that insulin signaling through Akt2 promotes anabolic lipid metabolism independent of Foxa2 or FoxO1 and through pathways additional to the mTORC1-dependent activation of SREBP1c.

Highlights

► Loss of FoxA2 does not affect Akt2 function on diet-induced liver TG accumulation ► FoxO1 decreases liver TG content through a pathway upstream or parallel to Akt2 ► Akt2 and Raptor are required for HCD-induced lipogenesis in mouse livers ► Activation of SREBP1c is necessary but not sufficient to induce lipogenesis

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