265 582

Cited 0 times in

Kr-pok increases gluconeogenesis through upregulation of G6pc and Pck1

Other Titles
 Kr-pok의 G6pc, Pck1 유전자 전사활성화를 통한 포도당 신생합성 조절 
Authors
 윤재현 
Issue Date
2016
Description
Dept. of Medical Science/박사
Abstract
Gluconeogenesis is essential for maintenance of blood glucose level during fasting. Gluconeogenesis is tightly regulated by the key enzymes, including glucose-6-phophatase (G6pc) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK). Transcription of the genes encoding the two enzymes is tightly regulated under fasting condition.
Kr-pok knockout mice showed a decrease in blood glucose level. Differential gene expression analysis of Kr-pok wild type and knockout mice liver showed that mRNA of G6pc and Pck1 are decreased. I investigated the role of Kr-pok in the regulation of gluconeogenesis. I found that Kr-pok is induced in the liver of fasted mice. Also, forskolin treatment increased Kr-pok expression in mice primary hepatocytes and knockout of Kr-pok decreased transcription of G6pc and Pck1. These results showed that, under fasting condition, Kr-pok can increase expression of G6pc and Pck1genes.
I investigated how Kr-pok can increase transcription of G6pc and Pck1 genes. Transient transcription assays of the reporter plasmid showed that Kr-pok increases transcription by acting on the IRSs of the G6pc and Pck1 promoters. ChIP assays revealed that Kr-pok reduces acetylation of FoxO1 and thereby increases FoxO1 binding to the IRS elements of the promoters to activate transcription of G6pc and Pck1. Kr-pok increased the interaction between FoxO1 and HDAC3 and deacetylated FoxO1. Also, I found that protein stability of Kr-pok is increased by treatment of forskolin. These results suggested that Kr-pok might be a metabolic regulator controlling expression of the two key gluconeogenic enzymes, G6pc and PEPCK.
Files in This Item:
T014097.pdf Download
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Others (기타) > 3. Dissertation
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/149139
사서에게 알리기
  feedback

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Browse

Links