Studies of Drosophila and mammals have revealed the importance of insulin signaling through phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and the serine/threonine kinase Akt/protein kinase B for the regulation of cell, organ, and organismal growth. In mammals, three highly conserved proteins, Akt1, Akt2, and Akt3, comprise the Akt family, of which the first two are required for normal growth and metabolism, respectively. Here we address the function of Akt3. Like Akt1, Akt3 is not required for the maintenance of normal carbohydrate metabolism but is essential for the attainment of normal organ size. However, in contrast to Akt1 ؊/؊ mice, which display a proportional decrease in the sizes of all organs, Akt3 ؊/؊ mice present a selective 20% decrease in brain size. Moreover, although Akt1-and Akt3-deficient brains are reduced in size to approximately the same degree, the absence of Akt1 leads to a reduction in cell number, whereas the lack of Akt3 results in smaller and fewer cells. Finally, mammalian target of rapamycin signaling is attenuated in the brains of Akt3؊/؊ but not Akt1 ؊/؊ mice, suggesting that differential regulation of this pathway contributes to an isoform-specific regulation of cell growth.While complex organisms grow toward determinate final sizes, there must be precise regulation within each tissue as well as coordination among organs to reach these final sizes (18,24). The regulation of both cell number and size contributes to the establishment of organ size, whereas cell number appears to be predominant in determining differences between species. Several factors, including circulating hormones and metabolites as well as cell-autonomous signaling cascades, control these processes (31). One of the key extracellular effectors determining organismal size is insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1). As demonstrated by genetic studies with mice, IGF1 is required for normal embryonic and postnatal growth (4,43,44,59). In addition, IGF1 controls the sizes of individual organs (43, 59). For example, normal brain growth requires IGF1 (6, 43), as IGF1-deficient brains are reduced in size secondary to a decrease in both cell number and cell size (6,15). Similarly, humans with IGF1 deficiency display severe growth retardation and suffer from mental retardation (75).In addition to extracellular factors, the intracellular signaling pathways determining growth are being uncovered. IGF1 acts through the type 1 IGF receptor to modulate an evolutionarily conserved pathway of molecules involved in the regulation of growth and metabolism (38,53). For many hormones, including IGF1 and insulin, binding to a receptor stimulates its protein tyrosine kinase activity, leading to the phosphorylation of scaffold proteins of the insulin receptor substrate (IRS) family. IRS proteins assemble complexes that include a number of potential signaling proteins, of which the lipid kinase phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) appears to be the most critical for the maintenance of cell size and proliferation (10). PI3K catalyzes the generation of phospha...
Summary Insulin drives the global anabolic response to nutrient ingestion, regulating both carbohydrate and lipid metabolism. Previous studies have demonstrated that Akt2/protein kinase B is critical to insulin’s control of glucose metabolism, but its role in lipid metabolism has remained controversial. Here we show that Akt2 is required for hepatic lipid accumulation in obese, insulin-resistant states induced by either leptin-deficiency or high fat diet feeding. Lepob/ob mice lacking hepatic Akt2 failed to amass triglycerides in their livers, associated with and most likely due to a decrease in lipogenic gene expression and de novo lipogenesis. However, Akt2 is also required for steatotic pathways unrelated to fatty acid synthesis, as mice fed high fat diet had reduced liver triglycerides in the absence of hepatic Akt2 but did not exhibit changes in lipogenesis. These data demonstrate that Akt2 is a requisite component of the insulin-dependent regulation of lipid metabolism during insulin resistance.
Trophic factor deprivation (TFD)-induced apoptosis in sympathetic neurons requires macromolecular synthesis–dependent BAX translocation, cytochrome c (cyt c) release, and caspase activation. Here, we report the contributions of other intrinsic and extrinsic pathway signals to these processes. Sympathetic neurons expressed all antiapoptotic BCL-2 proteins examined, yet expressed only certain BH3-only and multidomain proapoptotic BCL-2 family members. All coexpressed proapoptotic proteins did not, however, exhibit functional redundancy or compensatory expression, at least in the Bax −/−, Bak −/−, Bim −/−, Bid −/−, and Bad −/− neurons examined. Although the subcellular distribution or posttranslational modification of certain BCL-2 proteins changed with TFD, neither transcriptional nor posttranslational mechanisms regulated the expression or subcellular localization of BID, BAD, or BAK in this paradigm. Despite modest induction of Fas and FasL expression, Fas-mediated signaling did not contribute to TFD-induced apoptosis in sympathetic neurons. Similar findings were obtained with K+ withdrawal–induced apoptosis in cerebellar granule neurons, a model for activity-dependent neuronal survival in the CNS. Thus, expression alone does not guarantee functional redundancy (or compensation) among BCL-2 family members, and, at least in some cells, extrinsic pathway signaling and certain BH3-only proteins (i.e., BID and BAD) do not contribute to BAX-dependent cyt c release or apoptosis caused by TFD.
After a meal, insulin suppresses lipolysis through the activation of its downstream kinase, Akt, resulting in the inhibition of protein kinase A (PKA), the main positive effector of lipolysis. During insulin resistance, this process is ineffective, leading to a characteristic dyslipidemia and the worsening of impaired insulin action and obesity. Here, we describe a noncanonical Akt-independent, phosphoinositide-3 kinase (PI3K)-dependent pathway that regulates adipocyte lipolysis using restricted subcellular signaling. This pathway selectively alters the PKA phosphorylation of its major lipid droplet-associated substrate, perilipin. In contrast, the phosphorylation of another PKA substrate, hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL), remains Akt dependent. Furthermore, insulin regulates total PKA activity in an Akt-dependent manner. These findings indicate that localized changes in insulin action are responsible for the differential phosphorylation of PKA substrates. Thus, we identify a pathway by which insulin regulates lipolysis through the spatially compartmentalized modulation of PKA.
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