SUMMARY While diet-induced obesity has been exclusively attributed to increased caloric intake from fat, animals fed high fat diet (HFD) ad libitum (ad lib) eat frequently throughout day and night disrupting the normal feeding cycle. To test whether obesity and metabolic diseases result from HFD or disruption of metabolic cycles, we subjected mice to either ad lib or time restricted feeding (tRF) of a HFD for 8 h/day. Mice under tRF consume equivalent calories from HFD as those with ad lib access, yet are protected against obesity, hyperinsulinemia, hepatic steatosis, inflammation, and have improved motor coordination. The tRF regimen improved CREB, mTOR and AMPK pathway function and oscillations of the circadian clock and their target genes' expression. These changes in catabolic and anabolic pathways altered liver metabolome, improved nutrient utilization and energy expenditure. We demonstrate in mice that tRF regimen is a non-pharmacological strategy against obesity and associated diseases.
SUMMARY The LKB1 (also called STK11) tumor suppressor is mutationally inactivated in ~20% of non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC). LKB1 is the major upstream kinase activating the energy-sensing kinase AMPK, making LKB1-deficient cells unable to appropriately sense metabolic stress. We tested the therapeutic potential of metabolic drugs in NSCLC and identified phenformin, a mitochondrial inhibitor and analog of the diabetes therapeutic metformin, as selectively inducing apoptosis in LKB1-deficient NSCLC cells. Therapeutic trials in Kras-dependent mouse models of NSCLC revealed that tumors with Kras and Lkb1 mutations, but not those with Kras and p53 mutations showed selective response to phenformin as a single agent, resulting in prolonged survival. This study suggests phenformin as a cancer metabolism-based therapeutic to selectively target LKB1-deficient tumors.
SUMMARY Liver fibrosis is a reversible wound-healing response involving TGFβ1 activation of hepatic stellate cells (HSCs). Here we show that vitamin D receptor (VDR) ligands inhibit HSC activation and abrogate liver fibrosis, while Vdr knockout mice spontaneously developed hepatic fibrosis. Mechanistically, we describe a pronounced redistribution of genome wide VDR binding sites (VDR cistrome) in HSCs elicited by a TGFβ1 pro-fibrotic insult. This TGFβ1-induced VDR cistrome overlaps extensively with SMAD3 binding sites, with co-occupancy at numerous cis-regulatory elements identified on a large set of pro-fibrotic genes. Addition of VDR ligand reduces SMAD3 occupancy at co-regulated genes, revealing an intersecting VDR/SMAD genomic circuit that regulates hepatic fibrogenesis. These results define a role for VDR as a endocrine checkpoint to modulate the wound healing response in liver, and suggest VDR ligands as a potential therapy for liver fibrosis.
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has a dismal prognosis largely due to inefficient diagnosis and tenacious drug resistance. Activation of pancreatic stellate cells (PSCs) and consequent development of dense stroma are prominent features accounting for this aggressive biology 1 , 2 . The reciprocal interplay between PSCs and pancreatic cancer cells (PCCs) not only enhances tumour progression and metastasis but also sustains their own activation, facilitating a vicious cycle to exacerbate tumourigenesis and drug resistance 3 – 7 . Moreover, PSC activation occurs very early during PDAC tumourigenesis 8 – 10 , and activated PSCs comprise a significant fraction of the tumour mass, providing a rich source of readily detectable factors. Therefore, we hypothesized that the communication between PSCs and PCCs could be an Achilles’ heel exploitable to develop effective strategies for PDAC therapy and diagnosis. Here, starting with systematic proteomic investigation of secreted disease mediators and underlying molecular mechanisms, we reveal that leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) is a key paracrine factor from activated PSCs acting on cancer cells. Both pharmacologic LIF blockade and genetic Lifr deletion significantly slow tumour progression and augment chemotherapy efficacy to prolong survival of PDAC mouse models, mainly by modulating cancer cell differentiation and EMT status. Moreover, we show that, consistently in both mouse models and human PDAC, aberrant production of LIF in the pancreas is unique to pathological conditions and correlates with PDAC pathogenesis, and circulating LIF level changes correlate well with tumour response to therapy. Collectively, these findings uncover a previously unappreciated function of LIF in PDAC tumourigenesis, and suggest its translational potential as an attractive therapeutic target and circulating marker. These studies underscore how a better understanding of cell-cell communications within the tumour microenvironment promotes novel strategies for cancer therapy.
Age-associated insulin resistance (IR) and obesity-associated IR are two physiologically distinct forms of adult onset diabetes. While macrophage-driven inflammation is a core driver of obesity-associated IR1–6, the underlying mechanisms of the obesity-independent yet highly prevalent age-associated IR7 are largely unexplored. Comparative adipo-immune profiling (AIP) reveals that fat-resident regulatory T cells, termed fTregs, accumulate in adipose tissue as a function of age, but not obesity. Supporting the existence of two distinct mechanisms underlying IR, mice deficient in fTregs are protected against age-associated IR, yet remain susceptible to obesity-associated IR and metabolic disease. In contrast, selective depletion of fTregs via anti-ST2 antibody treatment increases adipose tissue insulin sensitivity. These findings establish that distinct immune cell populations within adipose tissue underlie aging- and obesity-associated IR and implicate fTregs as adipo-immune drivers and potential therapeutic targets in the treatment of age-associated IR.
The homeostasis of multicellular organisms requires terminally differentiated cells to preserve their lineage specificity. However, it is unclear if mechanisms exist to actively protect cell identity in response to environmental cues that confer functional plasticity. Regulatory T (Treg) cells, specified by the transcription factor Foxp3, are indispensable for immune system homeostasis. Here, we report that conserved non-coding sequence 2 (CNS2), a CpG-rich Foxp3 intronic cis-element specifically demethylated in mature Tregs, helps maintain immune homeostasis and limit autoimmune disease development by protecting Treg identity in response to signals that shape mature Treg functions and drive their initial differentiation. In activated Tregs, CNS2 helps protect Foxp3 expression from destabilizing cytokine conditions by sensing TCR/NFAT activation, which facilitates the interaction between CNS2 and Foxp3 promoter. Thus, epigenetically marked cis-elements can protect cell identity by sensing key environmental cues central to both cell identity formation and functional plasticity without interfering with initial cell differentiation.
Highlights d Genetic and dietary risk factors for colorectal cancer converge on the BA-FXR axis d FXR controls proliferating Lgr5 + intestinal stem cells d FXR agonists curtail colorectal cancer progression
Liver fibrosis is characterized by the persistent deposition of extracellular matrix components by hepatic stellate cell (HSC)-derived myofibroblasts. It is the histological manifestation of progressive, but reversible wound-healing processes. An unabated fibrotic response results in chronic liver disease and cirrhosis, a pathological precursor of hepatocellular carcinoma. We report here that JQ1, a small molecule inhibitor of bromodomain-containing protein 4 (BRD4), a member of bromodomain and extraterminal (BET) proteins, abrogate cytokine-induced activation of HSCs. Cistromic analyses reveal that BRD4 is highly enriched at enhancers associated with genes involved in multiple profibrotic pathways, where BRD4 is colocalized with profibrotic transcription factors. Furthermore, we show that JQ1 is not only protective, but can reverse the fibrotic response in carbon tetrachloride-induced fibrosis in mouse models. Our results implicate that BRD4 can act as a global genomic regulator to direct the fibrotic response through its coordinated regulation of myofibroblast transcription. This suggests BRD4 as a potential therapeutic target for patients with fibrotic complications.
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