Transcriptional regulation of human and rat hepatic lipid metabolism by the grapefruit flavonoid naringenin: Role of PPARα, PPARγ and LXRα

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Abstract

Disruption of lipid and carbohydrate homeostasis is an important factor in the development of prevalent metabolic diseases such as diabetes, obesity, and atherosclerosis. Therefore, small molecules that could reduce insulin dependence and regulate dyslipidemia could have a dramatic effect on public health. The grapefruit flavonoid naringenin has been shown to normalize lipids in diabetes and hypercholesterolemia, as well as inhibit the production of HCV. Here, we demonstrate that naringenin regulates the activity of nuclear receptors PPARα, PPARγ, and LXRα. We show it activates the ligand-binding domain of both PPARα and PPARγ, while inhibiting LXRα in GAL4-fusion reporters. Using TR-FRET, we show that naringenin is a partial agonist of LXRα, inhibiting its association with Trap220 co-activator in the presence of TO901317. In addition, naringenin induces the expression of PPARα co-activator, PGC1α. The flavonoid activates PPAR response element (PPRE) while suppressing LXRα response element (LXRE) in human hepatocytes, translating into the induction of PPAR-regulated fatty acid oxidation genes such as CYP4A11, ACOX, UCP1 and ApoAI, and inhibition of LXRα-regulated lipogenesis genes, such as FAS, ABCA1, ABCG1, and HMGR. This effect results in the induction of a fasted-like state in primary rat hepatocytes in which fatty acid oxidation increases, while cholesterol and bile acid production decreases. Our findings explain the myriad effects of naringenin and support its continued clinical development. Of note, this is the first description of a non-toxic, naturally occurring LXRα inhibitor. © 2010 Goldwasser et al.

Figures

  • Figure 1. Naringenin induces activation of PPARa and PPARc ligand-binding domains. HG5LN reporter cells expressing GAL4-PPARa (a) and GAL4-PPARc (b) reporters were treated with increasing concentrations of naringenin. Naringenin dose-dependently activated PPARa reaching 24%60.2% induction at 240 mM (P,0.001); and activated PPARc up to 57%60.3% at 80 mM (P,0.005). Data is presented as percent activation relative to 1 mM of classical agonists GW7647 and BRL49653, respectively. (c) LanthaScreen TR-FRET assay, demonstrating that naringenin did not affect the binding of the PGC1a co-activator peptide to recombinant PPARa LBD. (d) In contrast, the classical PPARa agonist GW7647 induces a dosedependent binding of PGC1a to PPARa in the same assay. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0012399.g001
  • Figure 2. Naringenin is a partial agonist of LXRa ligand-binding domain. (a) LXR-alpha-UAS-bla HEK 293T cells were stimulated with 4.7 nM TO901317 and exposed to increasing concentrations of naringenin. Naringenin dose-dependently inhibited LXRa activity, reaching 28.4%60.4% (p,0.01) and 39.1%69.4% (p,0.05) at concentrations of 126 mM and 400 mM, respectively. (b-d) Lanthascreen TR-FRET assay, demonstrating that naringenin weakly increased the binding of Trap 220/Drip-2 co-activator peptide to recombinant LXRa LBD, and inhibited this binding in the presence of TO901317, LXRa classical agonist. (b) Naringenin is a weak agonist, enhancing the binding of the LXRa LBD to the Trap 220/Drip-2 coactivator moderately, yet significantly, in a dose-dependent manner reaching 38.0%62.8% activation. (c) LXRa agonist TO901317 strongly enhanced co-activator binding. (d) When treated with 250 nM TO901317, increasing concentrations of naringenin led to an inhibition of the TR-FRET signal, reaching 15.0%64.1% inhibition (p,0.01) at 133 mM. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0012399.g002
  • Figure 3. Naringenin activates PPRE-driven and inhibits LXRE-driven gene expression in human hepatocytes. (a) Naringenin dosedependently enhanced PPRE activity, in Huh7 cells transiently transfected with a PPRE reporter, reaching 17%67% (p,0.05) at 200 mM. Induction was not different from PPAR agonists WY14,643 and ciglitazone. (b) Naringenin induced the expression of PPARa coactivator PGC1a by 14-fold (p = 0.001) as well as PPARa-regulated fatty acid oxidation genes CYP4A11/22, ACOX, UCP1 and ApoAI. Huh7 cells were treated with naringenin for 24 hours and mRNA isolated and anlysed by qRT-PCR. (c) Naringenin dose-dependently suppressed LXRE activity, in Huh7 cells transiently transfected with a LXRE reporter, reaching a 50.3%62.6% (p,0.001) inhibition at 150 mM. (d) Naringenin inhibited the expression of LXRa-regulated lipogenesis genes ABCA1, ABCG1, HMGR, and FASN. Cell viability under all conidtions was greater than 95%. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0012399.g003
  • Figure 4. Naringenin induced a fasted-like state in hepatic lipid metabolism. (a) Huh7 cells were stimulated for 24 hours with 200 mM naringenin, 10 mM WY14,643, or 10 mM ciglitazone. Naringenin treatment led to a 73%69% (p,0.001) reduction in ApoB production, while WY14,643 led to a 33%612% (p,0.01) reduction. Treatment with cigilitazone did not lead to a significant change in VLDL production. (b) Primary rat hepatocytes were stimulated with 200 mM naringenin or 10 mM WY14,643. Naringenin treatment led to a 61% (p,0.001) reduction in triglyceride production and 17% increase in ketone body formation, not different from WY14,643. However, naringenin treatment led to a 32%611% (p = 0.005) reduction in bile salt production, while WY14,643 did not. Urea accumulation in the media did not change significantly. (c) Intracellular levels of triglycerides in primary rat hepatocytes stimulated with naringenin. A slight decrease is observed. (d) Naringenin effect on SRE-driven gene expression. We show that naringein induces LDLR transcription by 26% (p = 0.02) while inhibiting HMGCS transcription by 13% (p = 0.001). It is thought that each promoter is regulated by a different SREBP isoform. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0012399.g004
  • Table 1. Real-Time qRT-PCR Primers.

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Goldwasser, J., Cohen, P. Y., Yang, E., Balaguer, P., Yarmush, M. L., & Nahmias, Y. (2010). Transcriptional regulation of human and rat hepatic lipid metabolism by the grapefruit flavonoid naringenin: Role of PPARα, PPARγ and LXRα. PLoS ONE, 5(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012399

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