(451x) Nuclear Receptors Based Modulation of Hepatic Lipid and Glucose Metabolism | AIChE

(451x) Nuclear Receptors Based Modulation of Hepatic Lipid and Glucose Metabolism

Authors 

Nagrath, D. - Presenter, Massachusetts General Hospital/Shriners Burn Hospital/Harvard Medical School
Tanimura, Y. - Presenter, Massachusetts General Hospital/Shriners Burn Hospital/Harvard Medical School
Xu, H. - Presenter, Massachusetts General Hospital/Shriners Burn Hospital/Harvard Medical School
Berthiaume, F. - Presenter, Física Aplicada III, Escuela Tecnica Superior de Ingenieros, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain
Yarmush, M. L. - Presenter, Center for Engineering in Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Shriners Hospital for Children


Nuclear Hormone Receptors are ligand activated transcription factors which are activated by binding to lipophilic ligands. The activated nuclear transcription factors have emerged as important regulators of lipid and glucose metabolism. These activated receptors, although pleitropic in nature, have been found to regulate the expression of genes involved in lipid and glucose metabolism and homeostasis. The modulation of these receptors provides a suitable therapeutic strategy for the management of various diseases ranging from diabetes to obesity. The current work investigates two different invitro (lean hepatocytes; fatty-hepatocytes made fatty invitro using a high fat diet and) and invivo (choline methionine deficient diet induced steatosis and Zucker rats)systems.

Using various ligands for these receptors we have developed strategies for regulating lipid and glucose metabolism and, increasing hepatic functions in cultured hepatocytes for bioartificial liver. First, hepatocytes were made fatty invitro using unsaturated fatty acids and later defatting kinetics and hepatic function was measured using various nuclear receptor ligands. Few nuclear receptor agonists selected from invitro experiments were then used for exvivo liver defatting.

Importantly, our results suggest a new mechanism to differentially regulate/promote fatty oxidation and limit lipid esterification and storage in hepatocytes using various agonists and antagonists of these nuclear receptors.