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Nicotinamide N-methyltransferase upregulation contributes to palmitate-elicited peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor transactivation in hepatocytes.

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) plays a pivotal role in regulating lipid metabolism and hepatic PPARγ transactivation contributes to fatty liver development. Fatty acids (FAs) are well-known endogenous ligands for PPARγ. Palmitate, a 16-C saturated FA (SFA) and the most abundant SFA in human circulation, is a strong inducer of hepatic lipotoxicity, a central pathogenic factor for various fatty liver diseases. In this study, using both alpha mouse liver 12 (AML12) and primary mouse hepatocytes, we investigated the effects of palmitate on hepatic PPARγ transactivation and underlying mechanisms, as well as the role of PPARγ transactivation in palmitate-induced hepatic lipotoxicity, all of which remain ambiguous currently. Our data revealed that palmitate exposure was concomitant with both PPARγ transactivation and upregulation of nicotinamide N-methyltransferase (NNMT), a methyltransferase catalyzing the degradation of nicotinamide, the predominant precursor for cellular NAD+ biosynthesis. Importantly, we discovered that PPARγ transactivation by palmitate was blunted by NNMT inhibition, suggesting that NNMT upregulation plays a mechanistic role in PPARγ transactivation. Further investigations uncovered that palmitate exposure is associated with intracellular NAD+ decline and NAD+ replenishment with NAD+ -enhancing agents, nicotinamide and nicotinamide riboside, obstructed palmitate-induced PPARγ transactivation, implying that cellular NAD+ decline resulted from NNMT upregulation represents a potential mechanism behind palmitate-elicited PPARγ transactivation. At last, our data showed that the PPARγ transactivation marginally ameliorated palmitate-induced intracellular triacylglycerol accumulation and cell death. Collectively, our data provided the first-line evidence supporting that NNMT upregulation plays a mechanistic role in palmitate-elicited PPARγ transactivation, potentially through reducing cellular NAD+ contents. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Hepatic PPARγ transactivation contributes to fatty liver development. Saturated fatty acids (SFAs) induce hepatic lipotoxicity. Here, we investigated whether and how palmitate, the most abundant SFA in the human blood, affects PPARγ transactivation in hepatocytes. We reported for the first time that upregulation of nicotinamide N-methyltransferase (NNMT), a methyltransferase catalyzing the degradation of nicotinamide, the predominant precursor for cellular NAD+ biosynthesis, plays a mechanistic role in regulating palmitate-elicited PPARγ transactivation through reducing intracellular NAD+ contents.

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