FEBS Letters
Volume 582, Issue 1 , Pages 68-73, 9 January 2008

Role of ChREBP in hepatic steatosis and insulin resistance

Edited by Peter Tontonoz and Laszlo Nagy

Institut Cochin, Université Paris Descartes, CNRS (UMR 8104), Département d’Endocrinologie, Métabolisme et Cancer, 24 Rue du Faubourg Saint Jacques, Paris, France

Inserm, U567, Paris, France

Received 19 June 2007; received in revised form 25 July 2007; accepted 25 July 2007. published online 14 August 2007.

Abstract 

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is tightly associated with insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes and obesity, but the molecular links between hepatic fat accumulation and insulin resistance are not fully identified. Excessive accumulation of triglycerides (TG) is one the main characteristics of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and fatty acids utilized for the synthesis of TG in liver are available from the plasma non-esterified fatty acid pool but also from fatty acids newly synthesized through hepatic de novo lipogenesis. Recently, the transcription factor ChREBP (carbohydrate responsive element binding protein) has emerged as a central determinant of lipid synthesis in liver through its transcriptional control of key genes of the lipogenic pathway, including fatty acid synthase and acetyl CoA carboxylase. In this mini-review, we will focus on the importance of ChREBP in the physiopathology of hepatic steatosis and insulin resistance by discussing the physiological and metabolic consequences of ChREBP knockdown in liver of ob/ob mice.

Keywords: ChREBP, LXR, Hepatic steatosis, Insulin resistance, ob/ob Mice

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PII: S0014-5793(07)00875-7

doi:10.1016/j.febslet.2007.07.084

FEBS Letters
Volume 582, Issue 1 , Pages 68-73, 9 January 2008