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ACOT1 deficiency attenuates high-fat diet–induced fat mass gain by increasing energy expenditure
Timothy D. Heden, Mallory P. Franklin, Christina Dailey, Mara T. Mashek, Chen Chen, Douglas G. Mashek
Timothy D. Heden, Mallory P. Franklin, Christina Dailey, Mara T. Mashek, Chen Chen, Douglas G. Mashek
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Research Article Metabolism

ACOT1 deficiency attenuates high-fat diet–induced fat mass gain by increasing energy expenditure

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Abstract

Acyl-CoA thioesterase 1 (ACOT1) catalyzes the hydrolysis of long-chain acyl-CoAs to free fatty acids and CoA and is typically upregulated in obesity. Whether targeting ACOT1 in the setting of high-fat diet–induced (HFD-induced) obesity would be metabolically beneficial is not known. Here we report that male and female ACOT1KO mice are partially protected from HFD-induced obesity, an effect associated with increased energy expenditure without alterations in physical activity or food intake. In males, ACOT1 deficiency increased mitochondrial uncoupling protein-2 (UCP2) protein abundance while reducing 4-hydroxynonenal, a marker of oxidative stress, in white adipose tissue and liver of HFD-fed mice. Moreover, concurrent knockdown (KD) of UCP2 with ACOT1 in hepatocytes prevented increases in oxygen consumption observed with ACOT1 KD during high lipid loading, suggesting that UCP2-induced uncoupling may increase energy expenditure to attenuate weight gain. Together, these data indicate that targeting ACOT1 may be effective for obesity prevention during caloric excess by increasing energy expenditure.

Authors

Timothy D. Heden, Mallory P. Franklin, Christina Dailey, Mara T. Mashek, Chen Chen, Douglas G. Mashek

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Figure 8

ACOT1 KD–induced increases in oxygen consumption during lipid loading are mediated via increased UCP2.

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ACOT1 KD–induced increases in oxygen consumption during lipid loading ar...
(A–D) Seahorse mitochondrial stress test time course and the average OCR in AML12 cells either under normal growth media conditions (A, n = 14–15 per group) or after 24 hours of oleate lipid loading at 50 μM oleate (B, n = 13–18 per group), 250 μM oleate (C, n = 15–18 per group), and 750 μM oleate (D, n = 14–15 per group). (E) Basal OCR in AML12 cells was measured over an approximately 22- to 24-hour time period with a Resipher system (n = 5–8 per group). All data are presented as mean ± SEM. ANOVA was used for the statistical tests.

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