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Citations to this article

LepRb+ cell–specific deletion of Slug mitigates obesity and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in mice
Min-Hyun Kim, … , Wen-Shu Wu, Liangyou Rui
Min-Hyun Kim, … , Wen-Shu Wu, Liangyou Rui
Published December 13, 2022
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2023;133(4):e156722. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI156722.
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Research Article Cell biology Metabolism Article has an altmetric score of 15

LepRb+ cell–specific deletion of Slug mitigates obesity and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in mice

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Abstract

Leptin exerts its biological actions by activating the long-form leptin receptor (LepRb). LepRb signaling impairment and leptin resistance are believed to cause obesity. The transcription factor Slug — also known as Snai2 — recruits epigenetic modifiers and regulates gene expression by an epigenetic mechanism; however, its epigenetic action has not been explored in leptin resistance. Here, we uncover a proobesity function of neuronal Slug. Hypothalamic Slug was upregulated in obese mice. LepRb+ cell–specific Slug-knockout (SlugΔLepRb) mice were resistant to diet-induced obesity, type 2 diabetes, and liver steatosis and experienced decreased food intake and increased fat thermogenesis. Leptin stimulated hypothalamic Stat3 phosphorylation and weight loss to a markedly higher level in SlugΔLepRb than in Slugfl/fl mice, even before their body weight divergence. Conversely, hypothalamic LepRb+ neuron–specific overexpression of Slug, mediated by AAV-hSyn-DIO-Slug transduction, induced leptin resistance, obesity, and metabolic disorders in mice on a chow diet. At the genomic level, Slug bound to and repressed the LepRb promoter, thereby inhibiting LepRb transcription. Consistently, Slug deficiency decreased methylation of LepRb promoter H3K27, a repressive epigenetic mark, and increased LepRb mRNA levels in the hypothalamus. Collectively, these results unravel what we believe to be a previously unrecognized hypothalamic neuronal Slug/epigenetic reprogramming/leptin resistance axis that promotes energy imbalance, obesity, and metabolic disease.

Authors

Min-Hyun Kim, Yuan Li, Qiantao Zheng, Lin Jiang, Martin G. Myers Jr., Wen-Shu Wu, Liangyou Rui

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Total citations by year

Year: 2024 Total
Citations: 4 4
Citation information
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Citations to this article (4)

Title and authors Publication Year
Hepatic Snai1 and Snai2 promote liver regeneration and suppress liver fibrosis in mice.
Wang P, Kang Q, Wu WS, Rui L
Cell Reports 2024
Unraveling the relationship between histone methylation and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
Xu L, Fan YH, Zhang XJ, Bai L
World journal of hepatology 2024
Evidence That Peripheral Leptin Resistance in Omental Adipose Tissue and Liver Correlates with MASLD in Humans
De la Cruz-Color L, Dominguez-Rosales JA, Maldonado-González M, Ruíz-Madrigal B, Sánchez Muñoz MP, Zaragoza-Guerra VA, Espinoza-Padilla VH, Ruelas-Cinco ED, Ramírez-Meza SM, Torres Baranda JR, González-Gutiérrez MD, Hernandez Nazara ZH
International journal of molecular sciences 2024
Swimming training prevents obesity installation and normalizes hypothalamic expressions of GLP1 and leptin receptors in adult offspring born in small litters.
Fischer SV, Siqueira BS, Cancian CRC, Montes EG, Vicari VN, Svidnicki PV, Grassiolli S
Einstein (Sao Paulo, Brazil) 2024

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