bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2025 Sep 18:2025.09.16.676620. doi: 10.1101/2025.09.16.676620.
ABSTRACT
Ketone body (KB) utilization increases during fasting and exercise due to enhanced hepatic fatty acid oxidation and KB production via the rate-limiting mitochondrial enzyme hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA synthase (HMGCS2). Since KB metabolism intersects with multiple metabolic pathways, and skeletal muscle KB catabolism rises during exercise, we tested the hypothesis that liver-specific HMGCS2 knockouts (KO) would have reduced energy expenditure (EE) and changes in the mitochondrial proteome of skeletal muscle with chronic exercise through voluntary wheel running (VWR), time-restricted feeding (TRF), or both combined to boost hepatic KB production and utilization. Control (CON) and HMGCS2 knockout (KO) mice (n=6-8 per group) underwent sedentary ad libitum feeding (SED+AL), SED+TRF, VWR+AL, and VWR+TRF for 16 weeks, with whole-body EE measured using indirect calorimetry. In CON mice, VWR increased total EE by 19.5% and non-resting EE by 50% under AL conditions, and total EE by 16% and non-resting EE by 47.9% under TRF conditions. However, the EE increases seen with VWR did not occur in KO mice. Proteomic analysis revealed that the loss of liver HMGCS2 significantly impacted proteins involved in metabolic processes within skeletal muscle, including reduced oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) protein expression in SED KO mice compared to sedentary CON. Notably, VWR restored OXPHOS protein expression in the muscle of the liver HMGCS2 KO but did not alter it in the CON. Furthermore, muscle from liver HMGCS2 KO mice had elevated expression glycolytic pathways in sedentary and VWR conditions. These results indicate that hepatic ketogenic deficiency (HMGCS2 KO) diminishes exercise-induced increases in EE and uniquely impacts baseline and exercise-related adaptations in the metabolic and mitochondrial proteome of skeletal muscle.
PMID:41000964 | PMC:PMC12458147 | DOI:10.1101/2025.09.16.676620
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