Abstract

Triacylglycerol plays a critical role in an organism's ability to withstand fuel deprivation, and dysregulation of triacylglycerol synthesis is important in the development of diseases such as obesity and diabetes. Glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase (GPAT) catalyzes the initial and committed step of glycerolipid synthesis and is therefore a potential site for regulation of triacylglycerol synthesis. Because several studies suggest that triacylglycerol synthesis is linked to the mitochondrial isoform, we studied mitochondrial GPAT expression and the effect of feeding status on the regulation of mitochondrial GPAT in various rat tissues. Liver, adipose, and soleus muscle have high levels of GPAT mRNA, but low protein expression, whereas heart and adrenal, tissues with low GPAT mRNA abundance, have the highest GPAT protein expression. In addition, heart, which has the highest expression of mitochondrial GPAT protein, has low mitochondrial GPAT specific activity (0.02 nmol/min/mg). Liver and adipose have the highest mitochondrial GPAT specific activity (0.17 nmol/min/mg), but very low protein expression. Discrepancies between GPAT protein expression and activity suggest that mitochondrial GPAT may be regulated acutely. In response to a 48-h fast, liver and adipose mitochondrial GPAT protein expression and activity decrease 30–50%. After 24-h refeeding of either chow or high-sucrose diet, mitochondrial GPAT protein expression and activity overshoot normal levels 30–60%. In kidney, mitochondrial GPAT protein and activity increase 65 and 30%, respectively, with refeeding, whereas in the heart, mitochondrial GPAT activity increases 2.3-fold after a fast, with no change in protein expression. We also found that hepatic mitochondrial GPAT activity in the neonatal rat constitutes a lower percentage of the total GPAT activity than in the adult. We postulate that GPAT expression is modulated uniquely in each tissue according to specific needs for triacylglycerol storage.

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