AMPK-mediated AS160 phosphorylation in skeletal muscle is dependent on AMPK catalytic and regulatory subunits

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Abstract

AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a heterotrimeric protein that regulates glucose transport mediated by cellular stress or pharmacological agonists such as 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide 1 β-D-ribonucleoside (AICAR). AS160, a Rab GTPase-activating protein, provides a mechanism linking AMPK signaling to glucose uptake. We show that AICAR increases AMPK, acetyl-CoA carboxylase, and AS160 phosphorylation by insulin-independent mechanisms in isolated skeletal muscle. Recombinant AMPK heterotrimeric complexes (α1β1γ1 and α2β2γ1) phosphorylate AS160 in a cell-free assay. In mice deficient in AMPK signaling (α2 AMPK knockout [KO], α2 AMPK kinase dead [KD], and γ3 AMPK KO), AICAR effects on AS160 phosphorylation were severely blunted, highlighting that complexes containing α2 and γ3 are necessary for AICAR-stimulated AS160 phosphorylation in intact skeletal muscle. Contraction-mediated AS160 phosphorylation was also impaired in α2 AMPK KO and KD but not γ3 AMPK KO mice. Our results implicate AS160 as a downstream target of AMPK. © 2006 by the American Diabetes Association.

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Treebak, J. T., Glund, S., Deshmukh, A., Klein, D. K., Long, Y. C., Jensen, T. E., … Wojtaszewski, J. F. P. (2006). AMPK-mediated AS160 phosphorylation in skeletal muscle is dependent on AMPK catalytic and regulatory subunits. Diabetes, 55(7), 2051–2058. https://doi.org/10.2337/db06-0175

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