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Nutrition and Gene Expression Lecture, Part 1, Feb 26, 2015 Changes in Gene Expression During the Fasted State Effect of Short-Term Fasting and Refeeding on Transcriptional Regulation of Metabolic Genes in Human Skeletal Muscle Henriette Pilegaard, Bengt Saltin, and P. Darrell Neufer Where is PDK4 on the genome? On chromosome 7. PDK4 THIS PAPER LOOKED PRIMARILY AT THE SYNTHESIS OF RNA FROM SEVERAL GENES: PDK4 WAS VERY IMPORTANT But what controls that? Regulatory proteins (called TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS) have to bind to the promoter, to start production of the RNA transcript. MAKE THE INITIAL RNA PROCESS TO mRNA R WHY DO WE NEED TO ACTIVATE PDK-4? YOUR FASTING BLOOD SUGAR IS TYPICALLY ABOUT 80-100 mg/100 ml (when you wake up). If your blood sugar is 80 (or higher) after 6 hours of sleep, and no food intake, where it that coming from? The brain and kidneys use about 10 grams/hour. There is about 20 grams in blood and extracellular fluid, that would be used up over 2 hours. WHERE DID THAT GLUCOSE COME FROM? IN THE MORNING, AFTER AN OVERNIGHT FAST, METABOLIC ADAPTATIONS ARE NEEDED TO MAINTAIN A NORMAL LEVEL OF BLOOD GLUCOSE Since you (or your ancestors!) needed to be alert and start foraging for food, good levels of blood sugar were really important in the morning. HOW DO WE CHANGE OUR METABOLISM, TO KEEP BLOOD SUGAR AT A NORMAL LEVEL? Bloodstream Glucose 3-carbon metabolites (glycerol-3-phosphate, etc) High-energy condition: energy flow toward Krebs cycle, when there is excess carbohydrate Pyruvate available PDH Krebs cycle for energy generation Bloodstream Glucose 3-carbon metabolites (glycerol-3-phosphate, etc) Pyruvate Energy deprivation: carbon flow toward glucose, to maintain blood sugar at 80 mg/dL. PDH complex: inactive form Krebs cycle for energy generation If we can stop pyruvate from entering the TCA cycle, it can be shunted toward gluconeogenesis instead. Other amino acids feed the TCA at different points: but their carbon skeletons can also be used for the production of glucose. During the fasted state, we need to generate about 80 grams of glucose. Block PDH! This diagram of changes in gene expression during show how energy can flow toward Acetyl-CoA, to be used for ATP and fatty acid synthesis..OR it can flow back up to glucose. Energy flow to glucose is favored if we restrict transfer of pyruvate to Acetyl-CoA LACTATE EXPORTED TO THE BLOODSTREAM The green arrows show steps activated by glucagon. KEY STEP IN THE LIVER, THE GLUCAGON WHICH IS ACTIVATED BY FASTING (GLUCAGON IS HIGH IN THE MORNING) ROUTES METABOLITE FLOW OVER TO GLUCONEOGENESIS GLYCOLYSIS Most of these steps are reversible. An important DIFFERENT step is the conversion of pyruvate back to phosphoenolpyruvate. This is the what happens if there are LOTS of calories available. IN But what is there is a shortage of calories and carbs? OUT PDK-4 IS A MAJOR ENZYME THAT INACTIVATES THE PDH COMPLEX. This prevents Acetyl-CoA from being used for ATP. Metabolite flow can now be reversed toward glucose. WHERE DOES OUR MORNING GLUCOSE COME FROM? Some of the glucose comes from stored glycogen. In the morning, there is also a CORTISOL BURST, which causes muscle to release 30 grams of amino acids. In the muscle, various rearrangements occur. Much of the amino acid from muscle is converted to ALANINE for export. CH3 +H N-C-COO3 The alanine, with other amino acids, travels to the liver. Alanine in the liver is deaminated to pyruvate. What can now be done with pyruvate? HOW CAN CHANGES IN THESE PATHWAYS BE STUDIED IN HUMAN VOLUNTEERS? The changes in gene expression that we review today can happen after a standard overnight fast.. If you don’t eat between 10 PM and 6 AM, these changes are very likely to occur. The chief issue that needs to be addressed is the need to maintain blood glucose in the morning. For alertness (you don’t want to become a meal for a roving predator!) you want to keep your blood glucose around 80-90 in the morning. That helps your brain function, since the brain normally gets all its energy from glucose. Nine healthy male subjects ranging in age from 22 to 28 years, with an average height of 185 cm (range 175–192) and a mean weight of 81 kgm (range 65–110) participated in the study. The subjects were habitually physically active and maintained their normal activity pattern between the two trials. The subjects were given both oral and written information about the experimental procedures before they gave their informed consent. The study was approved by the Copenhagen and Frederiksberg Ethics Committee (Denmark) and the Human Investigations Committee (Yale University). Experimental design. The subjects completed two trials (separated by 2–3 weeks), each consisting of 20 h of fasting followed by intake of a standardized refeeding meal, which in one trial was a carbohydrate-rich meal (CHO trial) and in the other a low-carbohydrate/high-fat meal (FAT trial). Muscle biopsies were obtained from the middle portion of the vastus lateralis muscle using the percutaneous needle biopsy technique with suction: - 3 h after a light standardized meal (control) - after 20 h of fasting - 1 h after finishing the refeeding meal. FOR STUDIES OF METABOLISM IN HUMANS, BLOOD SAMPLES AND MUSCLE BIOPSIES ARE THE USUAL LIMITS. We need to consider just which genes they examined. These genes play a role in the catabolism of fat for energy, since they produce the following proteins: Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) allows the cell to oxidize circulating triglycerides, thereby obtaining free fatty acids for energy. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT1) helps move fatty acids into the mitochondria, where they are degraded for energy during beta-oxidation. Long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (LCAD) catalyzes a step in the beta-oxidation of long-chain fatty acids. Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 (PDK4) suppresses pyruvate dehydrogenase, and blocks the routing of glucose into the citric acid cycle: this conserves glucose for other tasks. EPINEPHRINE AND GLUCAGON = ELEVATED DURING FASTING Hormone-sensitive lipase (inactive) EVENTS WITHIN THE FAT CELL: Plasma epinephrine and glucagon increases are part of the changes that occur during fasting. Hormone-sensitive lipase (active) Free fatty acids to muscle Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) acts to convert triglycerides to glycerol and free fatty acids, which are then transported into the cell. 0H H Carnitine Fatty acid (acyl-CoA also needed here) OUTSIDE THE MITOCHONDRIA INSIDE THE MITOCHONDRIA Enzyme: CPT-1 The carnitine derivative can cross the mitochondrial membrane! H 0H ATP Into mitochondria: the fatty acid is released, and then used for beta-oxidation and ATP production To another round of beta-oxidation ACETYL-CoA Make ATP Bloodstream Glucose Energy deprivation: carbon flow toward glucose. 3-carbon metabolites (glycerol-3-phosphate, etc) Pyruvate PDH-PO4 : inactive form Acetyl-CoA from beta-oxidation Krebs cycle for energy generation The promoter for human PDK-4 contains a binding site for the Glucocorticoid Response Element (GRE), a transcription factor activated by cortisol. Since cortisol is activated in the AM, after an overnight fast, cortisol plays a part in activation of PDK-4 expression. Other details of PDK-4 activation will be discussed. We need to consider just which genes they examined. These genes play a role in the catabolism of fat for energy, since they produce the following proteins: Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) allows the cell to oxidize circulating triglycerides, thereby obtaining free fatty acids for energy. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT1) helps move fatty acids into the mitochondria, where they are degraded for energy during beta-oxidation. Uncoupling protein-3 (UCP-3): controls membrane potential in the mitochondria, and rate of ATP-production Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 (PDK4) suppresses pyruvate dehydrogenase, and blocks the routing of glucose into the citric acid cycle: this conserves glucose for other tasks. FASTING LED TO A SUSTAINED TRANSCRIPTION OF THE GENES IN MUSCLE FOR: PDK4 Lipoprotein lipase This is consistent with the switch to burning fatty acids for energy in muscle The CONTINUED increase after refeeding is not yet explained! THE AUTHORS EXAMINED GENE EXPRESSION AT TWO LEVELS: -primary transcript (the RNA that was read directly off the DNA) -the mRNA (the complete RNA after processing, when it was prepared to be read into protein) -later this semester, we have further discussion of how the RNA was measured THE INCREASE IN MUSCLE PDK-4 AND LPL WAS MUCH GREATER FOR TWO SUBJECTS, #7 and #9. These two probably did a better job of switching over to oxidizing fat in muscle for energy, after a fast. HOW COULD WE LOOK AT THAT AMONG OURSELVES, WITHOUT TAKING A MUSCLE BIOPSY? UNCOUPLING-PROTEIN 3 ALSO INCREASED: Why? CPT-1 INCREASED, TO HELP OXIDIZE MORE FATTY ACIDS FOR ENERGY LEVELS OF mRNA SHOWED SAME DIRECTION AS CHANGES IN PRIMARY TRANSCRIPT, BUT EFFECTS WERE LESS DRAMATIC The Pilegaard study adds to our knowledge of how fasting changes the physiology of energy metabolism in skeletal muscle, including changes in gene expression in muscle. Carbohydrate intake blunts these effects, and actually moves the dynamic toward MAKING fat instead of BURNING fat. We will discuss that in part 2 of today’s lecture.