RESUMO
Elevated plasma branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) are strongly associated with obesity, insulin resistance (IR), and diabetes in humans and rodent models. However, the mechanisms of BCAA dysregulation and its systemic, organ, and cell-specific implications in the development of obesity and IR are not well understood. To gain mechanistic insight into the causes and effects of plasma BCAA elevations, we leveraged mouse models with high circulating BCAA levels prior to the onset of obesity and IR. Young mice lacking ankyrin-B in white adipose tissue (WAT) or bearing an ankyrin-B variant that causes age-driven metabolic syndrome exhibit downregulation of BCAA catabolism selectively in WAT and excess plasma BCAAs. Using cellular assays, we demonstrated that ankyrin-B promotes the surface localization of the amino acid transporter Asct2 in white adipocytes, and its deficit impairs BCAA uptake. Excess BCAA supplementation worsened glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity across genotypes. In contrast, BCAA overconsumption only increased adiposity in control mice, implicating WAT utilization of BCAAs in their obesogenic effects. These results shed light into the mechanistic underpinnings of metabolic syndrome caused by ankyrin-B deficits and provide new evidence of the relevance of WAT in the regulation of systemic BCAA levels, adiposity, and glucose homeostasis.
RESUMO
The ciliopathies are a group of phenotypically overlapping disorders caused by structural or functional defects in the primary cilium. Although disruption of numerous signaling pathways and cellular trafficking events have been implicated in ciliary pathology, treatment options for affected individuals remain limited. Here, we performed a genome-wide RNAi (RNA interference) screen to identify genetic suppressors of BBS4, one of the genes mutated in Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS). We discovered 10 genes that, when silenced, ameliorate BBS4-dependent pathology. One of these encodes USP35, a negative regulator of the ubiquitin proteasome system, suggesting that inhibition of a deubiquitinase, and subsequent facilitation of the clearance of signaling components, might ameliorate BBS-relevant phenotypes. Testing of this hypothesis in transient and stable zebrafish genetic models showed this posit to be true; suppression or ablation of usp35 ameliorated hallmark ciliopathy defects including impaired convergent extension (CE), renal tubule convolution, and retinal degeneration with concomitant clearance of effectors such as ß-catenin and rhodopsin. Together, our findings reinforce a direct link between proteasome-dependent degradation and ciliopathies and suggest that augmentation of this system might offer a rational path to novel therapeutic modalities.