Hodek, Ondrej
- Department of Forest Genetics and Plant Physiology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2024Peer reviewedOpen access
Lecoutre, Simon; Maqdasy, Salwan; Rizo-Roca, David; Renzi, Gianluca; Vlassakev, Ivan; Alaeddine, Lynn M.; Higos, Romane; Jalkanen, Jutta; Zhong, Jiawei; Zareifi, Danae S.; Frendo-Cumbo, Scott; Massier, Lucas; Hodek, Ondrej; Juvany, Marta; Moritz, Thomas; de Castro Barbosa, Thais; Omar-Hmeadi, Muhmmad; Lopez-Yus, Marta; Merabtene, Fatiha; Abatan, Jimon Boniface;
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Glutamine and glutamate are interconverted by several enzymes and alterations in this metabolic cycle are linked to cardiometabolic traits. Herein, we show that obesity-associated insulin resistance is characterized by decreased plasma and white adipose tissue glutamine-to-glutamate ratios. We couple these stoichiometric changes to perturbed fat cell glutaminase and glutamine synthase messenger RNA and protein abundance, which together promote glutaminolysis. In human white adipocytes, reductions in glutaminase activity promote aerobic glycolysis and mitochondrial oxidative capacity via increases in hypoxia-inducible factor 1 alpha abundance, lactate levels and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase signalling. Systemic glutaminase inhibition in male and female mice, or genetically in adipocytes of male mice, triggers the activation of thermogenic gene programs in inguinal adipocytes. Consequently, the knockout mice display higher energy expenditure and improved glucose tolerance compared to control littermates, even under high-fat diet conditions. Altogether, our findings highlight white adipocyte glutamine turnover as an important determinant of energy expenditure and metabolic health.Lecoutre, Maqdasy and Rizo-Roca show that whole-body pharmacological inhibition or adipocyte-specific deletion of glutaminase in mice activates thermogenesis in inguinal adipocytes and promotes metabolic health. They also link decreased plasma and adipose tissue glutamine-to-glutamate ratios to insulin resistance in humans with obesity.
Nature Metabolism
2024, Volume: 6, number: 7Publisher: NATURE PORTFOLIO
Medical Biotechnology
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s42255-024-01083-y
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/131331