[PDF][PDF] Carbohydrate response element binding protein, ChREBP, a transcription factor coupling hepatic glucose utilization and lipid synthesis

K Uyeda, JJ Repa - Cell metabolism, 2006 - cell.com
K Uyeda, JJ Repa
Cell metabolism, 2006cell.com
The ability of an organism to sense and store nutrients is vital to survival. The liver is the
major organ responsible for converting excess dietary carbohydrate to lipid for storage. An
elegant molecular pathway has evolved that allows increased glucose flux into hepatocytes
to generate a signaling molecule, xylulose 5-phosphate, that triggers rapid changes in
glycolytic enzyme activities and nuclear import of a transcription factor, ChREBP, which
coordinates the transcriptional regulation of enzymes that channel the glycolytic end …
The ability of an organism to sense and store nutrients is vital to survival. The liver is the major organ responsible for converting excess dietary carbohydrate to lipid for storage. An elegant molecular pathway has evolved that allows increased glucose flux into hepatocytes to generate a signaling molecule, xylulose 5-phosphate, that triggers rapid changes in glycolytic enzyme activities and nuclear import of a transcription factor, ChREBP, which coordinates the transcriptional regulation of enzymes that channel the glycolytic end-products into lipogenesis. Further understanding of this metabolic cascade should provide insights on conditions such as fatty liver, obesity, and the metabolic syndrome.
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