Mitochondrial glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase-1 directs the metabolic fate of exogenous fatty acids in hepatocytes

Abstract
Because excess triacylglycerol (TAG) in nonadipose tissues is closely associated with the development of insulin resistance, interest has increased in the metabolism of long-chain acyl-CoAs toward β-oxidation or the synthesis and storage of TAG. To learn whether a mitochondrial isoform of glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase (mtGPAT1) competes with carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT I) for acyl-CoAs and whether it contributes to the formation of TAG, we overexpressed rat mtGPAT1 13-fold in primary hepatocytes obtained from fasted rats. When 100, 250, or 750 μM oleate was present, both TAG mass and the incorporation of [14C]oleate into TAG increased more than twofold in hepatocytes overexpressing mtGPAT1 compared with vector controls. Although the incorporation of [14C]oleate into CO2and acid-soluble metabolites increased with increasing amounts of oleate in the media, these metabolites were ∼40% lower in the Ad-mtGPAT1 infected cells, consistent with competition for acyl-CoAs between CPT I and mtGPAT1. A 50–60% decrease was also observed in [14C]oleate incorporation into cholesteryl ester. With increasing amounts of exogenous oleate, [14C]TAG secretion increased appropriately in vector control-infected hepatocytes, suggesting that the machinery for VLDL-TAG biogenesis and secretion was unaffected. Despite the marked increases in TAG synthesis and storage in the Ad-mtGPAT1 cells, however, the Ad-mtGPAT1 cells secreted the same amount of [14C]TAG as the vector control cells. Thus, in isolated hepatocytes, mtGPAT1 may synthesize a cytosolic pool of TAG that cannot be secreted.
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