Abstract

Obesity is associated with hepatic steatosis, partially due to increased lipogenesis and decreased fatty acid β-oxidation in the liver; however, the underlying mechanism of abnormal lipid metabolism is not fully understood. We reported previously that obesity is associated with LCN13 (lipocalin 13) deficiency. LCN13 is a lipocalin family member involved in glucose metabolism, and LCN13 deficiency appears to contribute to hyperglycemia in obese mice. Here, we show that LCN13 is also an important regulator of lipogenesis and β-oxidation in the liver. In primary hepatocytes, recombinant LCN13 directly suppressed lipogenesis and increased fatty acid β-oxidation, whereas neutralization of endogenous LCN13 had an opposite effect. Transgenic overexpression of LCN13 protected against hepatic steatosis in mice with either dietary or genetic (ob/ob) obesity. LCN13 transgenic overexpression also improved hyperglycemia, glucose intolerance, and insulin resistance in ob/ob mice. Short-term LCN13 overexpression via an adenovirus-mediated gene transfer similarly attenuated hepatic steatosis in db/db mice. LCN13 inhibited the expression of important lipogenic genes and stimulated the genes that promote β-oxidation. These results suggest that LCN13 decreases liver lipid levels by both inhibiting hepatic lipogenesis and stimulating β-oxidation. LCN13 deficiency is likely to contribute to fatty liver disease in obese mice.

Highlights

  • Obesity is associated with lipocalin 13 deficiency and fatty liver disease

  • LCN13 is a lipocalin family member involved in glucose metabolism, and LCN13 deficiency appears to contribute to hyperglycemia in obese mice

  • LCN13 Suppresses Lipogenesis in Primary Hepatocytes—To overexpress LCN13, primary hepatocytes were prepared from C57BL/6 male mice (8 –9 weeks old) and infected with LCN13 or ␤-gal adenoviruses as described previously [6]

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Summary

Background

Results: Recombinant lipocalin 13 suppressed lipogenesis and promoted ␤-oxidation It attenuated hepatic steatosis and insulin resistance in obese mice. Obesity is associated with hepatic steatosis, partially due to increased lipogenesis and decreased fatty acid ␤-oxidation in the liver; the underlying mechanism of abnormal lipid metabolism is not fully understood. LCN13 is a lipocalin family member involved in glucose metabolism, and LCN13 deficiency appears to contribute to hyperglycemia in obese mice. MUP1 (major urinary protein 1), a lipocalin family member expressed primarily in hepatocytes, improves insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism; MUP1 deficiency may contribute to insulin resistance and hyperglycemia in obese mice [17, 18]. Lipocalin 13 Regulation of Lipid Metabolism the fasting state; importantly, LCN13 levels dramatically decrease in mice with either genetic (db/db) or diet-induced obesity [6]. Our results indicate that LCN13 is a novel regulator of lipid metabolism in mouse liver

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