Inhibition of mevalonate pathway prevents adipocyte browning in mice and men by affecting protein prenylation
Abstract
Recent research focusing on brown adipose tissue (BAT) function
emphasizes its importance in systemic metabolic homeostasis. We
show here that genetic and pharmacological inhibition of the
mevalonate pathway leads to reduced human and mouse brown
adipocyte function in vitro and impaired adipose tissue browning
in vivo. A retrospective analysis of a large patient cohort
suggests an inverse correlation between statin use and active
BAT in humans, while we show in a prospective clinical trial
that fluvastatin reduces thermogenic gene expression in human
BAT. We identify geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate as the key
mevalonate pathway intermediate driving adipocyte browning in
vitro and in vivo, whose effects are mediated by
geranylgeranyltransferases (GGTases), enzymes catalyzing
geranylgeranylation of small GTP-binding proteins, thereby
regulating YAP1/TAZ signaling through F-actin modulation.
Conversely, adipocyte-specific ablation of GGTase I leads to
impaired adipocyte browning, reduced energy expenditure, and
glucose intolerance under obesogenic conditions, highlighting
the importance of this pathway in modulating brown adipocyte
functionality and systemic metabolism. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Cell MetabolismVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
ElsevierSubject
adipocyte browning; mevalonate pathway; Statins; protein prenylation; small GTP-binding proteins; uncoupled mitochondrial respiration; energy expenditureOrganisational unit
02207 - Functional Genomics Center Zurich / Functional Genomics Center Zurich
03713 - Sauer, Uwe / Sauer, Uwe
08839 - Zamboni, Nicola (Tit.-Prof.)
03819 - Wolfrum, Christian / Wolfrum, Christian
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