Author/Authors :
Pingping Li، نويسنده , , Nathanael J. Spann، نويسنده , , Minna U. Kaikkonen، نويسنده , , Min Lu، نويسنده , , Da Young Oh، نويسنده , , Jesse N. Fox، نويسنده , , Gautam Bandyopadhyay، نويسنده , , Saswata Talukdar، نويسنده , , Jianfeng Xu، نويسنده , , William S. Lagakos، نويسنده , , David Patsouris، نويسنده , , Aaron Armando، نويسنده , , Oswald Quehenberger، نويسنده , , Edward A. Dennis، نويسنده , , Steven M. Watkins، نويسنده , , Johan Auwerx، نويسنده , , Christopher K. Glass، نويسنده , , Jerrold M. Olefsky، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Macrophage-mediated inflammation is a major contributor to obesity-associated insulin resistance. The corepressor NCoR interacts with inflammatory pathway genes in macrophages, suggesting that its removal would result in increased activity of inflammatory responses. Surprisingly, we find that macrophage-specific deletion of NCoR instead results in an anti-inflammatory phenotype along with robust systemic insulin sensitization in obese mice. We present evidence that derepression of LXRs contributes to this paradoxical anti-inflammatory phenotype by causing increased expression of genes that direct biosynthesis of palmitoleic acid and ω3 fatty acids. Remarkably, the increased ω3 fatty acid levels primarily inhibit NF-κB-dependent inflammatory responses by uncoupling NF-κB binding and enhancer/promoter histone acetylation from subsequent steps required for proinflammatory gene activation. This provides a mechanism for the in vivo anti-inflammatory insulin-sensitive phenotype observed in mice with macrophage-specific deletion of NCoR. Therapeutic methods to harness this mechanism could lead to a new approach to insulin-sensitizing therapies.