作者
Guenter Haemmerle,Tarek Moustafa,Gerald Wölkart,Sabrina Büttner,Albrecht Schmidt,Tineke van de Weijer,Matthijs K. C. Hesselink,David A. Jaeger,Petra C. Kienesberger,Kathrin A. Zierler,Renate Schreiber,Thomas O. Eichmann,Dagmar Kolb,Petra Kotzbeck,Martina Schweiger,Manju Kumari,Sandra Eder,Gabriele Schoiswohl,Nuttaporn Wongsiriroj,Nina M. Pollak,Franz P.W. Radner,Karina Preiss-Landl,Thomas Kolbe,Thomas Rülicke,Burkert Pieske,Michael Trauner,Achim Lass,Robert Zimmermann,Gerald Höefler,Saverio Cinti,Erin E. Kershaw,Patrick Schrauwen,Frank Madeo,Bernd Mayer,Rudolf Zechner
摘要
People with mutations in ATGL, a gene involved in lipid catabolism, suffer from neutral lipid storage disease and often from cardiomyopathy. Rudolf Zechner and his colleagues now show in mice that Atgl activity in cardiac muscle produces key lipid ligands for PPAR-α, a transcription factor that regulates proper lipid metabolism and fuel burning in this tissue. These results may explain the mechanisms responsible for the cardiomyopathy and offer a potential target for treatment. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) are nuclear hormone receptors that regulate genes involved in energy metabolism and inflammation. For biological activity, PPARs require cognate lipid ligands, heterodimerization with retinoic X receptors, and coactivation by PPAR-γ coactivator-1α or PPAR-γ coactivator-1β (PGC-1α or PGC-1β, encoded by Ppargc1a and Ppargc1b, respectively). Here we show that lipolysis of cellular triglycerides by adipose triglyceride lipase (patatin-like phospholipase domain containing protein 2, encoded by Pnpla2; hereafter referred to as Atgl) generates essential mediator(s) involved in the generation of lipid ligands for PPAR activation. Atgl deficiency in mice decreases mRNA levels of PPAR-α and PPAR-δ target genes. In the heart, this leads to decreased PGC-1α and PGC-1β expression and severely disrupted mitochondrial substrate oxidation and respiration; this is followed by excessive lipid accumulation, cardiac insufficiency and lethal cardiomyopathy. Reconstituting normal PPAR target gene expression by pharmacological treatment of Atgl-deficient mice with PPAR-α agonists completely reverses the mitochondrial defects, restores normal heart function and prevents premature death. These findings reveal a potential treatment for the excessive cardiac lipid accumulation and often-lethal cardiomyopathy in people with neutral lipid storage disease, a disease marked by reduced or absent ATGL activity.