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Lysophospholipid acylation modulates plasma membrane lipid organization and insulin sensitivity in skeletal muscle
Authors:Patrick J. Ferrara  Xin Rong  J. Alan Maschek  Anthony R.P. Verkerke  Piyarat Siripoksup  Haowei Song  Thomas D. Green  Karthickeyan C. Krishnan  Jordan M. Johnson  John Turk  Joseph A. Houmard  Aldons J. Lusis  Micah J. Drummond  Joseph M. McClung  James E. Cox  Saame Raza Shaikh  Peter Tontonoz  William L. Holland  Katsuhiko Funai
Abstract:Aberrant lipid metabolism promotes the development of skeletal muscle insulin resistance, but the exact identity of lipid-mediated mechanisms relevant to human obesity remains unclear. A comprehensive lipidomic analysis of primary myocytes from individuals who were insulin-sensitive and lean (LN) or insulin-resistant with obesity (OB) revealed several species of lysophospholipids (lyso-PLs) that were differentially abundant. These changes coincided with greater expression of lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase 3 (LPCAT3), an enzyme involved in phospholipid transacylation (Lands cycle). Strikingly, mice with skeletal muscle–specific knockout of LPCAT3 (LPCAT3-MKO) exhibited greater muscle lysophosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylcholine, concomitant with improved skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity. Conversely, skeletal muscle–specific overexpression of LPCAT3 (LPCAT3-MKI) promoted glucose intolerance. The absence of LPCAT3 reduced phospholipid packing of cellular membranes and increased plasma membrane lipid clustering, suggesting that LPCAT3 affects insulin receptor phosphorylation by modulating plasma membrane lipid organization. In conclusion, obesity accelerates the skeletal muscle Lands cycle, whose consequence might induce the disruption of plasma membrane organization that suppresses muscle insulin action.
Keywords:Metabolism   Muscle Biology
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