Abstract

The FOXN3 gene locus is associated with fasting blood glucose levels in non‐diabetic human population genetic studies. The blood glucose‐modifying variation within this gene regulates the abundance of both FOXN3 protein and transcript in primary human hepatocytes, with the hyperglycemia risk allele causing increases in both FOXN3 protein and transcript. Using transgenic and knock‐out zebrafish models, we showed previously that FOXN3 is a transcriptional repressor that regulates fasting blood glucose by altering liver gene expression of MYC, a master transcriptional regulator of glucose utilization, and by modulating pancreatic α cell mass and function through an unknown mechanism. Since homozygous Foxn3 null mice die perinatally, and heterozygous carries of the null allele are smaller than wild‐type siblings, we examine the metabolic effects of decreasing mouse liver Foxn3 expression in adult life, performing dynamic endocrine tests not feasible in adult zebrafish. Fasting glucose, glucagon, and insulin; and dynamic responses to glucose, insulin, pyruvate, glutamine, and glucagon were measured. Gluconeogenic and amino acid catabolic gene expression was examined in livers, as well. Knocking down liver Foxn3 expression via transduction with adeno‐associated virus serotype 8 particles encoding a short hairpin RNA targeting Fonx3 decreases fasting glucose and increases Myc expression, without altering fasting glucagon or fasting insulin. Liver Foxn3 knock‐down confers increases glucose tolerance, has no effect on insulin tolerance or response to glucagon challenge, blunts pyruvate and glutamine tolerance, and modulates expression of amino acid transporters and catabolic enzymes. We conclude that liver Foxn3 regulates substrate selection for gluconeogenesis.

Highlights

  • The transition from fed to fasted states is marked by simultaneous hormonal, neuronal, and intrinsic nutrient sensing changes within the liver

  • The hyperglycemia risk allele of this variation drives increased expression of liver FOXN3 (Karanth et al, 2016). We modeled this increase in liver FOXN3 by transgenic over-expression of human FOXN3 in zebrafish hepatocytes, and observed an increase in fasting blood glucose in animals fed their normal diets (Karanth et al, 2016)

  • Fasting blood glucagon and insulin were unaffected by shFoxn3 (Fig. 1F and G)

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Summary

Introduction

The transition from fed to fasted states is marked by simultaneous hormonal, neuronal, and intrinsic nutrient sensing changes within the liver. These signals culminate in altered intermediary metabolism to generate glucose and ketone bodies for export for use by other organs (Newman and Verdin, 2017). Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society.

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