Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2792580 | Cell Metabolism | 2016 | 15 Pages |
•Cold induces autophagy in the hypothalamus and lipophagy in brown fat and liver•Stimulating hypothalamic autophagy activates lipophagy at ambient temperature•Inhibiting CNS or peripheral autophagy or denervating BAT blocks lipid utilization•Lipophagy and cytosolic lipases display complementarity toward total lipolysis
SummaryThe integrative physiology of inter-organ communication in lipophagy regulation is not well understood. Lipophagy and the cytosolic lipases ATGL and HSL contribute to lipid droplet (LD) mobilization; however, whether autophagy proteins engage with lipases to promote lipid utilization remains unknown. Here, we show that cold induces autophagy in proopiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons and activates lipophagy in brown adipose tissue (BAT) and liver in mice. Targeted activation of autophagy in POMC neurons via intra-hypothalamic rapamycin is sufficient to trigger lipid utilization in room temperature-housed mice. Conversely, inhibiting autophagy in POMC neurons or in peripheral tissues or denervating BAT blocks lipid utilization. Unexpectedly, the autophagosome marker LC3 is mechanistically coupled to ATGL-mediated lipolysis. ATGL exhibits LC3-interacting region (LIR) motifs, and mutating a single LIR motif on ATGL displaces ATGL from LD and disrupts lipolysis. Thus, cold-induced activation of central autophagy activates lipophagy and cytosolic lipases in a complementary manner to mediate lipolysis in peripheral tissues.
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