Obesity is typically associated with elevated levels of free fatty acids (FFAs) and is linked to glucose intolerance and type 2 diabetes. FFAs exert divergent effects on insulin secretion from beta cells: acute exposure to FFAs stimulates insulin secretion, whereas chronic exposure impairs insulin secretion. The G protein-coupled receptor GPR40 is selectively expressed in beta cells and is activated by FFAs. We show here that GPR40 mediates both acute and chronic effects of FFAs on insulin secretion and that GPR40 signaling is linked to impaired glucose homeostasis. GPR40-deficient beta cells secrete less insulin in response to FFAs, and loss of GPR40 protects mice from obesity-induced hyperinsulinemia, hepatic steatosis, hypertriglyceridemia, increased hepatic glucose output, hyperglycemia, and glucose intolerance. Conversely, overexpression of GPR40 in beta cells of mice leads to impaired beta cell function, hypoinsulinemia, and diabetes. These results suggest that GPR40 plays an important role in the chain of events linking obesity and type 2 diabetes.
Summary
Production of bile by the liver is crucial for the absorption of lipophilic nutrients. Dysregulation of bile acid homeostasis can lead to cholestatic liver disease and ER stress. We show using global location analysis (“ChIP-on-Chip”) and cell-type specific gene ablation that the winged helix transcription factor Foxa2 is required for normal bile acid homeostasis. As suggested by the location analysis, deletion of Foxa2 in hepatocytes in Foxa2loxP/loxPAlfp.Cre mice leads to decreased transcription of genes encoding bile acid transporters on both the basolateral and canalicular membranes, resulting in intrahepatic cholestasis. Foxa2-deficient mice are strikingly sensitive to a diet containing cholic acid, which results in toxic accumulation of hepatic bile salts, ER stress, and liver injury. In addition, we demonstrate that expression of FOXA2 is dramatically decreased in liver samples from patients with different cholestatic syndromes, suggesting that reduced FOXA2 levels could exacerbate the injury.
Survival during prolonged food deprivation depends on the activation of hepatic gluconeogenesis. Inappropriate regulation of this process is a hallmark of diabetes and other metabolic diseases. Activation of the genes encoding gluconeogenic enzymes is mediated by hormone-responsive transcription factors such as the cyclic AMP response element binding protein (CREB) and the glucocorticoid receptor (GR). Here we show using cell-type-specific gene ablation that the winged helix transcription factor Foxa2 is required for activation of the hepatic gluconeogenic program during fasting. Specifically, Foxa2 promotes gene activation both by cyclic AMP, the second messenger for glucagon, and glucocorticoids. Foxa2 mediates these effects by enabling recruitment of CREB and GR to their respective target sites in chromatin. We conclude that Foxa2 is required for execution of the hepatic gluconeogenic program by integrating the transcriptional response of the hepatocyte to hormonal stimulation.
The forkhead box proteins A1 and A2 (Foxa1 and Foxa2) are transcription factors with critical roles in establishing the developmental competence of the foregut endoderm and in initiating liver specification. Using conditional gene ablation during a later phase of liver development, we show here that deletion of both Foxa1 and Foxa2 (Foxa1/2) in the embryonic liver caused hyperplasia of the biliary tree. Abnormal bile duct formation in Foxa1/2-deficient liver was due, at least in part, to activation of IL-6 expression, a proliferative signal for cholangiocytes. The glucocorticoid receptor is a negative regulator of IL-6 transcription; in the absence of Foxa1/2, the glucocorticoid receptor failed to bind to the IL-6 promoter, causing enhanced IL-6 expression. Thus, after liver specification, Foxa1/2 are required for normal bile duct development through prevention of excess cholangiocyte proliferation. Our data suggest that Foxa1/2 function as terminators of bile duct expansion in the adult liver through inhibition of IL-6 expression.
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