An integrative analysis of tissue-specific transcriptomic and metabolomic responses to short-term dietary methionine restriction in mice.
Sujoy GhoshLaura A ForneyDesiree WandersKirsten P StoneThomas W GettysPublished in: PloS one (2017)
Dietary methionine restriction (MR) produces a coordinated series of transcriptional responses in peripheral tissues that limit fat accretion, remodel lipid metabolism in liver and adipose tissue, and improve overall insulin sensitivity. Hepatic sensing of reduced methionine leads to induction and release of fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21), which acts centrally to increase sympathetic tone and activate thermogenesis in adipose tissue. FGF21 also has direct effects in adipose to enhance glucose uptake and oxidation. However, an understanding of how the liver senses and translates reduced dietary methionine into these transcriptional programs remains elusive. A comprehensive systems biology approach integrating transcriptomic and metabolomic readouts in MR-treated mice confirmed that three interconnected mechanisms (fatty acid transport and oxidation, tricarboxylic acid cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation) were activated in MR-treated inguinal adipose tissue. In contrast, the effects of MR in liver involved up-regulation of anti-oxidant responses driven by the nuclear factor, erythroid 2 like 2 transcription factor, NFE2L2. Metabolomic analysis provided evidence for redox imbalance, stemming from large reductions in the master anti-oxidant molecule glutathione coupled with disproportionate increases in ophthalmate and its precursors, glutamate and 2-aminobutyrate. Thus, cysteine and its downstream product, glutathione, emerge as key early hepatic signaling molecules linking dietary MR to its metabolic phenotype.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- contrast enhanced
- transcription factor
- insulin resistance
- magnetic resonance
- nuclear factor
- high fat diet
- fatty acid
- gene expression
- high fat diet induced
- amino acid
- toll like receptor
- magnetic resonance imaging
- single cell
- prostate cancer
- public health
- computed tomography
- rna seq
- hydrogen peroxide
- immune response
- inflammatory response
- nitric oxide
- protein kinase
- electron transfer
- heat stress