- Made available online as an Accepted Preprint 30 March 2010
- Accepted Preprint first posted online on 30 March 2010
Gender-dependent effect of Gpbar1 genetic deletion on the metabolic profiles of diet-induced obese mice
- Galya Vassileva,
- Weiwen Hu,
- Lizbeth Hoos1,
- Glen Tetzloff1,
- Shijun Yang,
- Li Liu1,
- Ling Kang1,
- Harry R Davis1,
- Joseph A Hedrick1,
- Hong Lan1,
- Timothy Kowalski1 and
- Eric L Gustafson
- Merck Research Laboratories, Department of Discovery Technologies, Kenilworth, New Jersey 07033, USA
1Merck Research Laboratories, Department of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Diseases, Kenilworth, New Jersey 07033, USA
- (Correspondence should be addressed to G Vassileva; Email: galya.vassileva{at}spcorp.com)
Abstract
G-protein-coupled bile acid receptor 1 (GPBAR1/TGR5/M-Bar/GPR131) is a cell surface receptor involved in the regulation of bile acid metabolism. We have previously shown that Gpbar1-null mice are resistant to cholesterol gallstone disease when fed a lithogenic diet. Other published studies have suggested that Gpbar1 is involved in both energy homeostasis and glucose homeostasis. Here, we examine the functional role of Gpbar1 in diet-induced obese mice. We found that body weight, food intake, and fasted blood glucose levels were similar between Gpbar1-null mice and their wild-type (WT) littermates when fed a chow or high-fat diet (HFD) for 2 months. However, insulin tolerance tests revealed improved insulin sensitivity in male Gpbar1−/− mice fed chow, but impaired insulin sensitivity when fed a HFD. In contrast, female Gpbar1−/− mice exhibited improved insulin sensitivity when fed a HFD compared with their WT littermates. Female Gpbar1−/− mice had significantly lower plasma cholesterol and triglyceride levels than their WT littermates on both diets. Male Gpbar1−/− mice on HFD displayed increased hepatic steatosis when compared with Gpbar1+/+ males and Gpbar1−/− females on HFD. These results suggest a gender-dependent regulation of Gpbar1 function in metabolic disease.
- Received in final form 9 March 2010
- Accepted 30 March 2010
- © 2010 Society for Endocrinology