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Skin-specific regulation of SREBP processing and lipid biosynthesis by glycerol kinase 5.


ABSTRACT: The recessive N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea-induced phenotype toku is characterized by delayed hair growth, progressive hair loss, and excessive accumulation of dermal cholesterol, triglycerides, and ceramides. The toku phenotype was attributed to a null allele of Gk5, encoding glycerol kinase 5 (GK5), a skin-specific kinase expressed predominantly in sebaceous glands. GK5 formed a complex with the sterol regulatory element-binding proteins (SREBPs) through their C-terminal regulatory domains, inhibiting SREBP processing and activation. In Gk5toku/toku mice, transcriptionally active SREBPs accumulated in the skin, but not in the liver; they were localized to the nucleus and led to elevated lipid synthesis and subsequent hair growth defects. Similar defective hair growth was observed in kinase-inactive GK5 mutant mice. Hair growth defects of homozygous toku mice were partially rescued by treatment with the HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor simvastatin. GK5 exists as part of a skin-specific regulatory mechanism for cholesterol biosynthesis, independent of cholesterol regulation elsewhere in the body.

SUBMITTER: Zhang D 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5495269 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Skin-specific regulation of SREBP processing and lipid biosynthesis by glycerol kinase 5.

Zhang Duanwu D   Tomisato Wataru W   Su Lijing L   Sun Lei L   Choi Jin Huk JH   Zhang Zhao Z   Wang Kuan-Wen KW   Zhan Xiaoming X   Choi Mihwa M   Li Xiaohong X   Tang Miao M   Castro-Perez Jose M JM   Hildebrand Sara S   Murray Anne R AR   Moresco Eva Marie Y EMY   Beutler Bruce B  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20170612 26


The recessive <i>N</i>-ethyl-<i>N</i>-nitrosourea-induced phenotype <i>toku</i> is characterized by delayed hair growth, progressive hair loss, and excessive accumulation of dermal cholesterol, triglycerides, and ceramides. The <i>toku</i> phenotype was attributed to a null allele of <i>Gk5</i>, encoding glycerol kinase 5 (GK5), a skin-specific kinase expressed predominantly in sebaceous glands. GK5 formed a complex with the sterol regulatory element-binding proteins (SREBPs) through their C-ter  ...[more]

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