The liver plays essential roles in maintaining systemic glucolipid homeostasis under ever changing metabolic stressors. Metabolic dysregulation can lead to both adaptive and maladaptive changes that i Show more
The liver plays essential roles in maintaining systemic glucolipid homeostasis under ever changing metabolic stressors. Metabolic dysregulation can lead to both adaptive and maladaptive changes that impact systemic physiology. Here, we examined disparate genetic and environmental metabolic stressors and identified apolipoprotein A4 (ApoA4) as a circulating protein upregulated in liver-specific KOs for carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 and pyruvate carboxylase. We found this upregulation to be exacerbated by fasting and high-fat or ketogenic diets. Unique among these models was a concomitant increase in activating transcription factor 3 (Atf3). Liver-specific overexpression of Atf3 resulted in increased ApoA4 expression in a sex-dependent manner. To understand the requirement of Atf3 to metabolic stress, we generated liver-specific Atf3, Cpt2 double KO mice. These experiments demonstrated the requirement for Atf3 in the induction of ApoA4 mRNA, ApoA4 protein, and serum triglycerides that were also sex-dependent. These experiments reveal the roles of hepatic Atf3 and ApoA4 in response to metabolic stress in vivo. Show less