Nutrient-sensing nuclear receptors coordinate autophagy

Jae Man Lee, Martin Wagner, Rui Xiao, Kang Ho Kim, Dan Feng, Mitchell A. Lazar, David D. Moore

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

425 Scopus citations

Abstract

Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved catabolic process that recycles nutrients upon starvation and maintains cellular energy homeostasis. Its acute regulation by nutrient-sensing signalling pathways is well described, but its longer-term transcriptional regulation is not. The nuclear receptors peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-α (PPAR α) and farnesoid X receptor (FXR) are activated in the fasted and fed liver, respectively. Here we show that both PPARα and FXR regulate hepatic autophagy in mice. Pharmacological activation of PPAR α reverses the normal suppression of autophagy in the fed state, inducing autophagic lipid degradation, or lipophagy. This response is lost in PPAR α knockout (Ppara -/-, also known as Nr1c1 -/-') mice, which are partially defective in the induction of autophagy by fasting. Pharmacological activation of the bile acid receptor FXR strongly suppresses the induction of autophagy in the fasting state, and this response is absent in FXR knockout (Fxr -/-, also known as Nr1h4 -/-) mice, which show a partial defect in suppression of hepatic autophagy in the fed state. PPAR α and FXR compete for binding to shared sites in autophagic gene promoters, with opposite transcriptional outputs. These results reveal complementary, interlocking mechanisms for regulation of autophagy by nutrient status.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)112-115
Number of pages4
JournalNature
Volume516
Issue number729
DOIs
StatePublished - 4 Dec 2014

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