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FGF21 controls hepatic lipid metabolism via sex-dependent interorgan crosstalk
Aki T. Chaffin, Karlton R. Larson, Kuei-Pin Huang, Chih-Ting Wu, Nadejda Godoroja, Yanbin Fang, Devi Jayakrishnan, Karla A. Soto Sauza, Landon C. Sims, Niloufar Mohajerani, Michael L. Goodson, Karen K. Ryan
Aki T. Chaffin, Karlton R. Larson, Kuei-Pin Huang, Chih-Ting Wu, Nadejda Godoroja, Yanbin Fang, Devi Jayakrishnan, Karla A. Soto Sauza, Landon C. Sims, Niloufar Mohajerani, Michael L. Goodson, Karen K. Ryan
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Research Article Endocrinology Hepatology

FGF21 controls hepatic lipid metabolism via sex-dependent interorgan crosstalk

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Abstract

The liver regulates energy partitioning and use in a sex-dependent manner, coupling hepatic substrate availability to female reproductive status. Fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) is a hepatokine produced in response to metabolic stress that adaptively directs systemic metabolism and substrate use to reduce hepatic lipid storage. Here we report that FGF21 altered hepatic transcriptional and metabolic responses, and reduced liver triglycerides, in a sex-dependent manner. FGF21 decreased hepatic triglycerides in obese male mice in a weight loss–independent manner; this was abrogated among female littermates. The effect of FGF21 on hepatosteatosis is thought to derive, in part, from increased adiponectin secretion. Accordingly, plasma adiponectin and its upstream adrenergic receptor → cAMP → exchange protein directly activated by cAMP signaling pathway was stimulated by FGF21 in males and inhibited in females. Both ovariectomized and reproductively senescent old females responded to FGF21 treatment by decreasing body weight, but liver triglycerides and adiponectin remained unchanged. Thus, the benefit of FGF21 treatment for improving hepatosteatosis depends on sex but not on a functional female reproductive system. Because FGF21 provides a downstream mechanism contributing to several metabolic interventions, and given its direct clinical importance, these findings may have broad implications for the targeted application of nutritional and pharmacological treatments for metabolic disease.

Authors

Aki T. Chaffin, Karlton R. Larson, Kuei-Pin Huang, Chih-Ting Wu, Nadejda Godoroja, Yanbin Fang, Devi Jayakrishnan, Karla A. Soto Sauza, Landon C. Sims, Niloufar Mohajerani, Michael L. Goodson, Karen K. Ryan

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Figure 7

Aging influences the sex-dependent control of energy balance, but not hepatosteatosis, by FGF21.

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Aging influences the sex-dependent control of energy balance, but not he...
FGF21 (0.1 mg/kg twice daily, i.p., 3 days) decreased body weight in 25-month-old “old” and 4.5-month-old “young” mice in a sex- and age-dependent manner. As expected, FGF21 decreased body weight in young males but not young females. In old mice, both male and female FGF21-treated mice lost weight (A and B). By contrast, the effect of FGF21 on liver triglycerides depended on sex but not age, where FGF21-treated males decreased triglycerides while females did not (C). Analyses made by 3-way ANOVA, Tukey post hoc test, *P < 0.05, ***P < 0.001, ****P < 0.0001; Mann-Whitney, ##P < 0.01. Data are shown as mean ± SEM; n = 4–8 mice/group.

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