TY - JOUR
T1 - Hepatic CB1 receptor signaling triggers Gi/oα-mediated lipolysis in lean mice but Gsα-mediated lipogenesis in obese mice
AU - Liu, Jie
AU - Oliverio, Anna
AU - Godlewski, Grzegorz
AU - Kočvarová, Radka
AU - Arif, Muhammad
AU - Basu, Abhishek
AU - Guan, Yukun
AU - Feng, Dechun
AU - Puhl, Henry L.
AU - Iyer, Malliga R.
AU - Cinar, Resat
AU - Gao, Bin
AU - Tam, Joseph
AU - Kunos, George
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025/9
Y1 - 2025/9
N2 - Objectives: Obesity-induced steatotic liver disease (SLD) is driven by the uptake of adipocyte-derived fatty acids (FAs) into hepatocytes via the FA translocase CD36, which also prevents their consumption by inhibiting AMP kinase (AMPK)-mediated FA oxidation (FAO). We explored the role of hepatocyte CB1 receptors (hCB1R) in controlling hepatic triglyceride (TG) content by regulating CD36 and its downstream targets. Methods: hCB1R knockout (hCB1Rko) mice and their control littermates kept on standard or high-fat diet were used to analyze hCB1R-mediated hepatic gene expression profile and lipid metabolism in intact mice and in cultured hepatocytes. Results: Multi-omics data indicate that hCB1R target a distinct set of genes associated with SLD, including Cd36. In mice with diet-induced obesity, hCB1R signaling via CD36-AMPK-FAO pathway contributes to both the development of SLD and its reversal by CB1R blockade. But, in lean mice hCB1R signaling inhibits CD36 expression and activates AMPK-mediated FAO. These opposite effects were replicated in AML12 mouse hepatocytes incubated with or without oleic acid (OA). OA, an endogenous ligand of GPR3, induced a switch in hCB1R signaling from a Gi/oα-mediated reduction in cAMP to a Gsα-mediated increase in cAMP in a GPR3/Gsα -dependent manner, facilitated by increasing the ratio of Gsα:Gi/oα proteins in the steatotic compared to lean liver. Conclusions: In the lean state, endocannabinoid activation of hCB1R increases FAO, which mitigates SLD, as reported for chronic marihuana smokers, whereas in obese mice hCB1R tonically inhibit FAO, which promotes SLD and underlies the anti-steatotic effect of peripheral CB1R blockade.
AB - Objectives: Obesity-induced steatotic liver disease (SLD) is driven by the uptake of adipocyte-derived fatty acids (FAs) into hepatocytes via the FA translocase CD36, which also prevents their consumption by inhibiting AMP kinase (AMPK)-mediated FA oxidation (FAO). We explored the role of hepatocyte CB1 receptors (hCB1R) in controlling hepatic triglyceride (TG) content by regulating CD36 and its downstream targets. Methods: hCB1R knockout (hCB1Rko) mice and their control littermates kept on standard or high-fat diet were used to analyze hCB1R-mediated hepatic gene expression profile and lipid metabolism in intact mice and in cultured hepatocytes. Results: Multi-omics data indicate that hCB1R target a distinct set of genes associated with SLD, including Cd36. In mice with diet-induced obesity, hCB1R signaling via CD36-AMPK-FAO pathway contributes to both the development of SLD and its reversal by CB1R blockade. But, in lean mice hCB1R signaling inhibits CD36 expression and activates AMPK-mediated FAO. These opposite effects were replicated in AML12 mouse hepatocytes incubated with or without oleic acid (OA). OA, an endogenous ligand of GPR3, induced a switch in hCB1R signaling from a Gi/oα-mediated reduction in cAMP to a Gsα-mediated increase in cAMP in a GPR3/Gsα -dependent manner, facilitated by increasing the ratio of Gsα:Gi/oα proteins in the steatotic compared to lean liver. Conclusions: In the lean state, endocannabinoid activation of hCB1R increases FAO, which mitigates SLD, as reported for chronic marihuana smokers, whereas in obese mice hCB1R tonically inhibit FAO, which promotes SLD and underlies the anti-steatotic effect of peripheral CB1R blockade.
KW - CD36
KW - Endocannabinoids
KW - GPR3
KW - Metabolic switch
KW - Oleic acid
KW - Steatotic liver disease
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105007136804&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.metabol.2025.156308
DO - 10.1016/j.metabol.2025.156308
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.article???
C2 - 40446956
AN - SCOPUS:105007136804
SN - 0026-0495
VL - 170
JO - Metabolism: Clinical and Experimental
JF - Metabolism: Clinical and Experimental
M1 - 156308
ER -