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  4. Adipocyte NCoR Knockout Decreases PPARγ Phosphorylation and Enhances PPARγ Activity and Insulin Sensitivity
 
research article

Adipocyte NCoR Knockout Decreases PPARγ Phosphorylation and Enhances PPARγ Activity and Insulin Sensitivity

Li, Pingping
•
Fan, Wuqiang
•
Xu, Jianfeng
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2011
Cell

Insulin resistance, tissue inflammation, and adipose tissue dysfunction are features of obesity and Type 2 diabetes. We generated adipocyte-specific Nuclear Receptor Corepressor (NCoR) knockout (AKO) mice to investigate the function of NCoR in adipocyte biology, glucose and insulin homeostasis. Despite increased obesity, glucose tolerance was improved in AKO mice, and clamp studies demonstrated enhanced insulin sensitivity in liver, muscle, and fat. Adipose tissue macrophage infiltration and inflammation were also decreased. PPARγ response genes were upregulated in adipose tissue from AKO mice and CDK5-mediated PPARγ ser-273 phosphorylation was reduced, creating a constitutively active PPARγ state. This identifies NCoR as an adaptor protein that enhances the ability of CDK5 to associate with and phosphorylate PPARγ. The dominant function of adipocyte NCoR is to transrepress PPARγ and promote PPARγ ser-273 phosphorylation, such that NCoR deletion leads to adipogenesis, reduced inflammation, and enhanced systemic insulin sensitivity, phenocopying the TZD-treated state.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2011.09.050
Web of Science ID

WOS:000296902300015

Author(s)
Li, Pingping
Fan, Wuqiang
Xu, Jianfeng
Lu, Min
Yamamoto, Hiroyasu  
Auwerx, Johan  
Sears, Dorothy D.
Talukdar, Saswata
Oh, Dayoung
Chen, Ai
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Date Issued

2011

Published in
Cell
Volume

147

Issue

4

Start page

815

End page

26

Subjects

Activated Receptor-Gamma

•

Adipose-Tissue

•

Nuclear Receptors

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Co-Repressor

•

Resistance

•

Obesity

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Inflammation

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Macrophages

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Metabolism

•

Fat

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LISP  
Available on Infoscience
November 15, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/72606
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