Cell Metabolism
Volume 17, Issue 4, 2 April 2013, Pages 586-598
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Article
Molecular and Genetic Crosstalks between mTOR and ERRα Are Key Determinants of Rapamycin-Induced Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver

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Summary

mTOR and ERRα are key regulators of common metabolic processes, including lipid homeostasis. However, it is currently unknown whether these factors cooperate in the control of metabolism. ChIP-sequencing analyses of mouse liver reveal that mTOR occupies regulatory regions of genes on a genome-wide scale including enrichment at genes shared with ERRα that are involved in the TCA cycle and lipid biosynthesis. Genetic ablation of ERRα and rapamycin treatment, alone or in combination, alter the expression of these genes and induce the accumulation of TCA metabolites. As a consequence, both genetic and pharmacological inhibition of ERRα activity exacerbates hepatic hyperlipidemia observed in rapamycin-treated mice. We further show that mTOR regulates ERRα activity through ubiquitin-mediated degradation via transcriptional control of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. Our work expands the role of mTOR action in metabolism and highlights the existence of a potent mTOR/ERRα regulatory axis with significant clinical impact.

Highlights

► Functional genomics reveals that mTOR is a transcriptional regulator of metabolism ► ERRα and mTOR target an overlapping set of genes to regulate cell metabolism ► Inhibition of ERRα exacerbates the development of rapamycin-induced fatty liver ► mTOR controls ERRα activity via a ubiquitin/proteasome-dependent mechanism

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These authors contributed equally to this work