Defects in mitophagy promote redox-driven metabolic syndrome in the absence of TP53INP1

线粒体自噬缺陷会导致缺乏 TP53INP1 的氧化还原驱动代谢综合征

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作者:Marion Seillier, Laurent Pouyet, Prudence N'Guessan, Marie Nollet, Florence Capo, Fabienne Guillaumond, Laure Peyta, Jean-François Dumas, Annie Varrault, Gyslaine Bertrand, Stéphanie Bonnafous, Albert Tran, Gargi Meur, Piero Marchetti, Magalie A Ravier, Stéphane Dalle, Philippe Gual, Dany Muller, Gu

Abstract

The metabolic syndrome covers metabolic abnormalities including obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D). T2D is characterized by insulin resistance resulting from both environmental and genetic factors. A genome-wide association study (GWAS) published in 2010 identified TP53INP1 as a new T2D susceptibility locus, but a pathological mechanism was not identified. In this work, we show that mice lacking TP53INP1 are prone to redox-driven obesity and insulin resistance. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the reactive oxygen species increase in TP53INP1-deficient cells results from accumulation of defective mitochondria associated with impaired PINK/PARKIN mitophagy. This chronic oxidative stress also favors accumulation of lipid droplets. Taken together, our data provide evidence that the GWAS-identified TP53INP1 gene prevents metabolic syndrome, through a mechanism involving prevention of oxidative stress by mitochondrial homeostasis regulation. In conclusion, this study highlights TP53INP1 as a molecular regulator of redox-driven metabolic syndrome and provides a new preclinical mouse model for metabolic syndrome clinical research.

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