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Follistatin 315

Activin-Binding Protein, FSH-Suppressing Protein, FST-315, FS-315

Quick Stats
Studies 14
Trials 93
Score 2
2008 pubmed

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma down-regulates follistatin in intestinal epithelial cells through SP1.

Necela. Brian M BM; Su. Weidong W; Thompson. E Aubrey EA

Key Findings

  • Activating PPAR‑gamma with rosiglitazone reduces follistatin‑315 mRNA in intestinal epithelial cells.
  • The reduction requires PPAR‑gamma’s DNA‑binding domain and its partnership with RXR, not changes in mRNA stability.
  • PPAR‑gamma represses the transcription factor Sp1, and knocking down Sp1 stops the rosiglitazone‑induced drop in follistatin.

Practical Outcomes

  • If you’re using PPAR‑gamma activators (e.g., rosiglitazone or some natural compounds) they may lower your body’s own follistatin levels, which could blunt the muscle‑building or anti‑activin effects of follistatin supplements. There’s no direct dosing advice, but be aware of possible drug‑nutrient interactions that could affect muscle and metabolic outcomes.

Summary

The study shows that turning on the PPAR‑gamma pathway (using the drug rosiglitazone) cuts down the amount of the protein follistatin made by gut cells. It does this by blocking a helper protein called Sp1 that normally boosts follistatin production. The effect isn’t because the follistatin RNA breaks down faster, but because the gene’s activity is suppressed.

Abstract

Activation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma) down-regulates the expression of follistatin mRNA in intestinal epithelial cells in vivo. The mechanism of PPARgamma-mediated down-regulation of follistatin was investigated using non-transformed, rat intestinal epithelial cells (RIE-1). RIE cells expressed activin A, the activin receptors ActRI and ActRII, and the follistatin-315 mRNA. RIE-1 cells responded to endogenous activin A, and this response was antagonized by follistatin, as evidenced by changes in cell growth and regulation of an activin-responsive reporter. Using RIE-1 cells, we show that activation of PPARgamma by rosiglitazone reduced follistatin mRNA levels in a dose- and concentration-dependent manner. Down-regulation of follistatin by rosiglitazone required the DNA binding domain of PPARgamma and was dependent upon dimerization with the retinoid X receptor. Inhibition of follistatin expression by rosiglitazone was not associated with decreased follistatin mRNA stability, suggesting that regulation may be at the promoter level. Analysis of the follistatin promoter revealed consensus binding sites for AP-1, AP-2, and Sp1. Targeting the AP-1 pathway with SP600125, an inhibitor of JNK, and TAM67, a dominant negative c-Jun, had no effect on PPARgamma-mediated down-regulation of follistatin. However, the follistatin promoter was dramatically regulated by Sp1, and this regulation was inhibited by PPARgamma expression. Knockdown of Sp1 expression relieved repression of follistatin levels by rosiglitazone. Moreover, PPARgamma was found to interact with Sp1 and repress its transcriptional activation function. Collectively, our data indicate that repression of Sp1 transcriptional activity by PPARgamma is the underlying mechanism responsible for PPARgamma-mediated regulation of follistatin expression.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2008

Date

2008-09-03T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1074/jbc.m804481200