PPARγ coactivator-1α contributes to exercise-induced regulation of intramuscular lipid droplet programming in mice and humans

T. R. Koves, L.M. Sparks, J. P. Kovalik, M. Mosedale, R. Arumugam, K. L. Debalsi, K. Everingham, L. Thorne, E. Phielix, R.C. Meex, C. L. Kien, M.K.C. Hesselink, P. Schrauwen*, D. M. Muoio

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Intramuscular accumulation of triacylglycerol, in the form of lipid droplets (LD), has gained widespread attention as a hallmark of metabolic disease and insulin resistance. Paradoxically, LDs also amass in muscles of highly trained endurance athletes that are exquisitely insulin sensitive. Understanding the molecular mechanisms that mediate the expansion and appropriate metabolic control of LDs in the context of habitual physical activity could lead to new therapeutic opportunities. Herein, we show that acute exercise elicits robust upregulation of a broad program of genes involved in regulating LD assembly, morphology, localization and mobilization. Prominent among these was perilipin-5, a scaffolding protein that affects the spatial and metabolic interactions between LD and their surrounding mitochondrial reticulum. Studies in transgenic mice and primary human skeletal myocytes established a key role for the exercise-responsive transcriptional co-activator, PGC-1alpha, in coordinating intramuscular LD programming with mitochondrial remodeling. Moreover, translational studies comparing physically active versus inactive humans identified a remarkably strong association between expression of intramuscular LD genes and enhanced insulin action in exercise trained subjects. These results reveal an intimate molecular connection between intramuscular LD biology and mitochondrial metabolism that could prove relevant to the etiology and treatment of insulin resistance other disorders of lipid imbalance.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)522-534
JournalJournal of Lipid Research
Volume54
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2013

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