p110-β associates with the Vps34–Vps15–Beclin 1–Atg14L complex and facilitates generation of PtdIns(3)P to promote autophagy.
OBJECTIVETo determine whether the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) catalytic subunits p110-α and p110-β play a role in liver steatosis induced by a high-fat diet (HFD).RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODSLiver-specific p110-α and p110-β knockout mice and control animals for each group were fed an HFD or normal chow for 8 weeks. Biochemical assays and quantitative real-time PCR were used to measure triglyceride, expression of lipogenic and gluconeogenic genes, and activity of protein kinases downstream of PI3K in liver lysates. Fatty acid uptake and incorporation into triglycerides were assessed in isolated hepatocytes.RESULTSHepatic triglyceride levels in HFD-fed p110-α−/− mice were 84 ± 3% lower than in p110-α+/+ mice, whereas the loss of p110-β did not significantly alter liver lipid accumulation. p110-α−/− livers also showed a reduction in atypical protein kinase C activity and decreased mRNA and protein expression of several lipogenic genes. Hepatocytes isolated from p110-α−/− mice exhibited decreased palmitate uptake and reduced fatty acid incorporation into triglycerides as compared with p110-α+/+ cells, and hepatic expression of liver fatty acid binding protein was lower in p110-α−/− mice fed the HFD as compared with controls. Ablation of neither p110-α nor p110-β ameliorated glucose intolerance induced by the HFD, and genes involved in gluconeogenesis were upregulated in the liver of both knockout animals.CONCLUSIONSPI3K p110-α, and not p110-β, promotes liver steatosis in mice fed an HFD. p110-α might exert this effect in part through activation of atypical protein kinase C, upregulation of lipogenesis, and increased uptake of fatty acids.
Several studies have reported that activation of G(q)-coupled receptors inhibits PI3K (phosphoinositide 3-kinase) signalling. In the present study, we used purified proteins to demonstrate that Galpha(q) directly inhibits p110alpha/p85alpha PI3K in a GTP-dependent manner. Activated Galpha(q) binds to the p110alpha/p85alpha PI3K with an apparent affinity that is seven times stronger than that for Galpha(q).GDP as measured by fluorescence spectroscopy. In contrast, Galpha(q) did not bind to the p110gamma PI3K. Fluorescence spectroscopy experiments also showed that Galpha(q) competes with Ras, a PI3K activator, for binding to p110alpha/p85alpha. Interestingly, co-precipitation studies using deletion mutants showed that Galpha(q) binds to the p85-binding domain of p110alpha and not to the Ras-binding domain. Expression of constitutively active Galpha(q)Q209L in cells inhibited Ras activation of the PI3K/Akt pathway but had no effect on Ras/Raf/MEK [MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinase)/ERK (extracellular-signal-regulated kinase) kinase] signalling. These results suggest that activation of G(q)-coupled receptors leads to increased binding of Galpha(q).GTP to some isoforms of PI3K, which might explain why these receptors inhibit this signalling pathway in certain cell types.
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