Reduced hepatic fatty acid oxidation in fasting PPARα null mice is due to impaired mitochondrial hydroxymethylglutaryl‐CoA synthase gene expression

Abstract
Glucose and fatty acid metabolism (oxidation versus esterification) has been measured in hepatocytes isolated from 24 h starved peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha (PPARalpha) null and wild-type mice. In PPARalpha null mice, the development of hypoglycemia during starvation was due to a reduced capacity for hepatic gluconeogenesis secondary to a 70% lower rate of fatty acid oxidation. This was not due to inappropriate expression of the hepatic CPT I gene, which was similar in both genotypes, but to impaired mitochondrial hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA synthase gene expression in the PPARalpha null mouse liver. We also demonstrate that hepatic steatosis of fasting PPARalpha null mice was not due to enhanced triglyceride synthesis.