Compound- and fiber type-selective requirement of AMPKγ3 for insulin-independent glucose uptake in skeletal muscle

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Compound- and fiber type-selective requirement of AMPKγ3 for insulin-independent glucose uptake in skeletal muscle. / Rhein, Philipp; Desjardins, Eric M; Rong, Ping; Ahwazi, Danial; Bonhoure, Nicolas; Stolte, Jens; Santos, Matthieu D; Ovens, Ashley J; Ehrlich, Amy M; Sanchez Garcia, José L; Ouyang, Qian; Yabut, Julian M; Kjolby, Mads; Membrez, Mathieu; Jessen, Niels; Oakhill, Jonathan S; Treebak, Jonas T; Maire, Pascal; Scott, John W; Sanders, Matthew J; Descombes, Patrick; Chen, Shuai; Steinberg, Gregory R; Sakamoto, Kei.

In: Molecular Metabolism, Vol. 51, 101228, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rhein, P, Desjardins, EM, Rong, P, Ahwazi, D, Bonhoure, N, Stolte, J, Santos, MD, Ovens, AJ, Ehrlich, AM, Sanchez Garcia, JL, Ouyang, Q, Yabut, JM, Kjolby, M, Membrez, M, Jessen, N, Oakhill, JS, Treebak, JT, Maire, P, Scott, JW, Sanders, MJ, Descombes, P, Chen, S, Steinberg, GR & Sakamoto, K 2021, 'Compound- and fiber type-selective requirement of AMPKγ3 for insulin-independent glucose uptake in skeletal muscle', Molecular Metabolism, vol. 51, 101228. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2021.101228

APA

Rhein, P., Desjardins, E. M., Rong, P., Ahwazi, D., Bonhoure, N., Stolte, J., Santos, M. D., Ovens, A. J., Ehrlich, A. M., Sanchez Garcia, J. L., Ouyang, Q., Yabut, J. M., Kjolby, M., Membrez, M., Jessen, N., Oakhill, J. S., Treebak, J. T., Maire, P., Scott, J. W., ... Sakamoto, K. (2021). Compound- and fiber type-selective requirement of AMPKγ3 for insulin-independent glucose uptake in skeletal muscle. Molecular Metabolism, 51, [101228]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2021.101228

Vancouver

Rhein P, Desjardins EM, Rong P, Ahwazi D, Bonhoure N, Stolte J et al. Compound- and fiber type-selective requirement of AMPKγ3 for insulin-independent glucose uptake in skeletal muscle. Molecular Metabolism. 2021;51. 101228. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2021.101228

Author

Rhein, Philipp ; Desjardins, Eric M ; Rong, Ping ; Ahwazi, Danial ; Bonhoure, Nicolas ; Stolte, Jens ; Santos, Matthieu D ; Ovens, Ashley J ; Ehrlich, Amy M ; Sanchez Garcia, José L ; Ouyang, Qian ; Yabut, Julian M ; Kjolby, Mads ; Membrez, Mathieu ; Jessen, Niels ; Oakhill, Jonathan S ; Treebak, Jonas T ; Maire, Pascal ; Scott, John W ; Sanders, Matthew J ; Descombes, Patrick ; Chen, Shuai ; Steinberg, Gregory R ; Sakamoto, Kei. / Compound- and fiber type-selective requirement of AMPKγ3 for insulin-independent glucose uptake in skeletal muscle. In: Molecular Metabolism. 2021 ; Vol. 51.

Bibtex

@article{68ff0888f7e04d33842a411908c6080a,
title = "Compound- and fiber type-selective requirement of AMPKγ3 for insulin-independent glucose uptake in skeletal muscle",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: The metabolic master-switch AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) mediates insulin-independent glucose uptake in muscle and regulates the metabolic activity of brown and beige adipose tissue (BAT). The regulatory AMPKγ3 isoform is uniquely expressed in skeletal muscle and potentially in BAT. Herein, we investigated the role that AMPKγ3 plays in mediating skeletal muscle glucose uptake and whole-body glucose clearance in response to small-molecule activators that act on AMPK via distinct mechanisms. We also assessed whether γ3 plays a role in adipose thermogenesis and browning.METHODS: Global AMPKγ3 knockout (KO) mice were generated. A systematic whole-body, tissue, and molecular phenotyping linked to glucose homeostasis was performed in γ3 KO and wild-type (WT) mice. Glucose uptake in glycolytic and oxidative skeletal muscle ex vivo as well as blood glucose clearance in response to small molecule AMPK activators that target the nucleotide-binding domain of the γ subunit (AICAR) and allosteric drug and metabolite (ADaM) site located at the interface of the α and β subunit (991, MK-8722) were assessed. Oxygen consumption, thermography, and molecular phenotyping with a β3-adrenergic receptor agonist (CL-316,243) treatment were performed to assess BAT thermogenesis, characteristics, and function.RESULTS: Genetic ablation of γ3 did not affect body weight, body composition, physical activity, and parameters associated with glucose homeostasis under chow or high-fat diet. γ3 deficiency had no effect on fiber-type composition, mitochondrial content and components, or insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in skeletal muscle. Glycolytic muscles in γ3 KO mice showed a partial loss of AMPKα2 activity, which was associated with reduced levels of AMPKα2 and β2 subunit isoforms. Notably, γ3 deficiency resulted in a selective loss of AICAR-, but not MK-8722-induced blood glucose-lowering in vivo and glucose uptake specifically in glycolytic muscle ex vivo. We detected γ3 in BAT and found that it preferentially interacts with α2 and β2. We observed no differences in oxygen consumption, thermogenesis, morphology of BAT and inguinal white adipose tissue (iWAT), or markers of BAT activity between WT and γ3 KO mice.CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that γ3 plays a key role in mediating AICAR- but not ADaM site binding drug-stimulated blood glucose clearance and glucose uptake specifically in glycolytic skeletal muscle. We also showed that γ3 is dispensable for β3-adrenergic receptor agonist-induced thermogenesis and browning of iWAT.",
author = "Philipp Rhein and Desjardins, {Eric M} and Ping Rong and Danial Ahwazi and Nicolas Bonhoure and Jens Stolte and Santos, {Matthieu D} and Ovens, {Ashley J} and Ehrlich, {Amy M} and {Sanchez Garcia}, {Jos{\'e} L} and Qian Ouyang and Yabut, {Julian M} and Mads Kjolby and Mathieu Membrez and Niels Jessen and Oakhill, {Jonathan S} and Treebak, {Jonas T} and Pascal Maire and Scott, {John W} and Sanders, {Matthew J} and Patrick Descombes and Shuai Chen and Steinberg, {Gregory R} and Kei Sakamoto",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier GmbH.. All rights reserved.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1016/j.molmet.2021.101228",
language = "English",
volume = "51",
journal = "Molecular Metabolism",
issn = "2212-8778",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Compound- and fiber type-selective requirement of AMPKγ3 for insulin-independent glucose uptake in skeletal muscle

AU - Rhein, Philipp

AU - Desjardins, Eric M

AU - Rong, Ping

AU - Ahwazi, Danial

AU - Bonhoure, Nicolas

AU - Stolte, Jens

AU - Santos, Matthieu D

AU - Ovens, Ashley J

AU - Ehrlich, Amy M

AU - Sanchez Garcia, José L

AU - Ouyang, Qian

AU - Yabut, Julian M

AU - Kjolby, Mads

AU - Membrez, Mathieu

AU - Jessen, Niels

AU - Oakhill, Jonathan S

AU - Treebak, Jonas T

AU - Maire, Pascal

AU - Scott, John W

AU - Sanders, Matthew J

AU - Descombes, Patrick

AU - Chen, Shuai

AU - Steinberg, Gregory R

AU - Sakamoto, Kei

N1 - Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier GmbH.. All rights reserved.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - OBJECTIVE: The metabolic master-switch AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) mediates insulin-independent glucose uptake in muscle and regulates the metabolic activity of brown and beige adipose tissue (BAT). The regulatory AMPKγ3 isoform is uniquely expressed in skeletal muscle and potentially in BAT. Herein, we investigated the role that AMPKγ3 plays in mediating skeletal muscle glucose uptake and whole-body glucose clearance in response to small-molecule activators that act on AMPK via distinct mechanisms. We also assessed whether γ3 plays a role in adipose thermogenesis and browning.METHODS: Global AMPKγ3 knockout (KO) mice were generated. A systematic whole-body, tissue, and molecular phenotyping linked to glucose homeostasis was performed in γ3 KO and wild-type (WT) mice. Glucose uptake in glycolytic and oxidative skeletal muscle ex vivo as well as blood glucose clearance in response to small molecule AMPK activators that target the nucleotide-binding domain of the γ subunit (AICAR) and allosteric drug and metabolite (ADaM) site located at the interface of the α and β subunit (991, MK-8722) were assessed. Oxygen consumption, thermography, and molecular phenotyping with a β3-adrenergic receptor agonist (CL-316,243) treatment were performed to assess BAT thermogenesis, characteristics, and function.RESULTS: Genetic ablation of γ3 did not affect body weight, body composition, physical activity, and parameters associated with glucose homeostasis under chow or high-fat diet. γ3 deficiency had no effect on fiber-type composition, mitochondrial content and components, or insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in skeletal muscle. Glycolytic muscles in γ3 KO mice showed a partial loss of AMPKα2 activity, which was associated with reduced levels of AMPKα2 and β2 subunit isoforms. Notably, γ3 deficiency resulted in a selective loss of AICAR-, but not MK-8722-induced blood glucose-lowering in vivo and glucose uptake specifically in glycolytic muscle ex vivo. We detected γ3 in BAT and found that it preferentially interacts with α2 and β2. We observed no differences in oxygen consumption, thermogenesis, morphology of BAT and inguinal white adipose tissue (iWAT), or markers of BAT activity between WT and γ3 KO mice.CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that γ3 plays a key role in mediating AICAR- but not ADaM site binding drug-stimulated blood glucose clearance and glucose uptake specifically in glycolytic skeletal muscle. We also showed that γ3 is dispensable for β3-adrenergic receptor agonist-induced thermogenesis and browning of iWAT.

AB - OBJECTIVE: The metabolic master-switch AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) mediates insulin-independent glucose uptake in muscle and regulates the metabolic activity of brown and beige adipose tissue (BAT). The regulatory AMPKγ3 isoform is uniquely expressed in skeletal muscle and potentially in BAT. Herein, we investigated the role that AMPKγ3 plays in mediating skeletal muscle glucose uptake and whole-body glucose clearance in response to small-molecule activators that act on AMPK via distinct mechanisms. We also assessed whether γ3 plays a role in adipose thermogenesis and browning.METHODS: Global AMPKγ3 knockout (KO) mice were generated. A systematic whole-body, tissue, and molecular phenotyping linked to glucose homeostasis was performed in γ3 KO and wild-type (WT) mice. Glucose uptake in glycolytic and oxidative skeletal muscle ex vivo as well as blood glucose clearance in response to small molecule AMPK activators that target the nucleotide-binding domain of the γ subunit (AICAR) and allosteric drug and metabolite (ADaM) site located at the interface of the α and β subunit (991, MK-8722) were assessed. Oxygen consumption, thermography, and molecular phenotyping with a β3-adrenergic receptor agonist (CL-316,243) treatment were performed to assess BAT thermogenesis, characteristics, and function.RESULTS: Genetic ablation of γ3 did not affect body weight, body composition, physical activity, and parameters associated with glucose homeostasis under chow or high-fat diet. γ3 deficiency had no effect on fiber-type composition, mitochondrial content and components, or insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in skeletal muscle. Glycolytic muscles in γ3 KO mice showed a partial loss of AMPKα2 activity, which was associated with reduced levels of AMPKα2 and β2 subunit isoforms. Notably, γ3 deficiency resulted in a selective loss of AICAR-, but not MK-8722-induced blood glucose-lowering in vivo and glucose uptake specifically in glycolytic muscle ex vivo. We detected γ3 in BAT and found that it preferentially interacts with α2 and β2. We observed no differences in oxygen consumption, thermogenesis, morphology of BAT and inguinal white adipose tissue (iWAT), or markers of BAT activity between WT and γ3 KO mice.CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that γ3 plays a key role in mediating AICAR- but not ADaM site binding drug-stimulated blood glucose clearance and glucose uptake specifically in glycolytic skeletal muscle. We also showed that γ3 is dispensable for β3-adrenergic receptor agonist-induced thermogenesis and browning of iWAT.

U2 - 10.1016/j.molmet.2021.101228

DO - 10.1016/j.molmet.2021.101228

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 33798773

VL - 51

JO - Molecular Metabolism

JF - Molecular Metabolism

SN - 2212-8778

M1 - 101228

ER -

ID: 261110384