Ical energy stored in fat to drive gluconeogenesis. The liver also provides lipid to other peripheral tissues by esterifying fatty acids into triglycerides (TG) and secreting them in the form of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL). Complex Sermorelin regulatory mechanisms have evolved to control hepatic fatty acid utilization, trafficking, and export. However, nutrient excess and obesity perturb the ability of the liver to maintain homeostasis and these hepatic metabolic abnormalities contribute to the hyperglycemia and dyslipidemia that are prevalent in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Recent work has demonstrated that the lipin family of proteins (lipin 1, 2, and 3) are critical regulators of hepatic intermediary metabolism [1] that are strongly affected by alterations in energy homeostasis [2,3]. Lipins are bifunctional intracellular proteins that regulate fatty acid metabolism at two distinct regulatory levels. Lipins act as phosphatidic acid phosphohydrolase (PAP) enzymes that catalyze the dephosphorylation of phosphatidic acid (PA) to generate diacylglycerol (DAG); the penultimate step in triglyceride (TG) synthesis [4,5,6]. Unlike other enzymes in the TG synthetic pathway that are integral membrane proteins, lipins are solubleand contain a nuclear localization signal [7,8,9]. Lipins also act as transcriptional regulatory proteins by associating with DNAbound transcription factors to modulate their activity [7,10,11]. In liver, lipin 1 interacts with and coactivates the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor a (PPARa) and its coactivator (PPARc coactivator 1a (PGC-1a)) to enhance the Docosahexaenoyl ethanolamide expression of genes involved in fatty acid oxidation by recruiting in other coactivator proteins with histone acetyltransferase activity [10]. The effects of lipin 1 on hepatic fatty acid oxidation can proceed independent of PPARa, but not PGC-1a [10], suggesting that other transcription factor partners of PGC-1a are also involved in this response. Hepatic lipin 1 expression is robustly induced in liver by food deprivation in a PGC-1a-dependent manner [10]. The induction of lipin 1 by fasting likely serves to enhance fatty acid catabolism under fasting conditions since knockdown of lipin 1 by shRNA markedly attenuates the fasting-induced increase in the expression of fatty acid oxidation enzymes. Conversely, forced lipin 1 overexpression increases the expression of these enzymes and stimulates hepatic ketone production [10]. Mice with a genetic defect in lipin 1 (fatty liver dystrophic (fld) mice) exhibit a severe hepatic steatosis characterized by marked reductions in the expression of fatty acid oxidation enzymes [10]. Thus, lipin 1 appears to be a critical regulator of hepatic fatty acid utilization.Lipin 1 and HNFWhile it is clear that lipin 1 is a direct target gene of PGC-1a, the other components of the transcriptional complex that cooperate with PGC-1a to regulate lipin 1 expression remain unclear. Herein, we demonstrate that PGC-1a works with the hepatocyte nuclear factor 4a (HNF4a) to regulate of lipin 1 expression in liver cells. We also show that the induction of lipin 1 feeds forward to modulate HNF4a activity in a promoter-specific manner to direct this nuclear receptor to activate hepatic fatty acid oxidation while suppressing expression of genes encoding apoproteins. These data further elucidate the regulatory mechanisms by which lipin 1 controls hepatic metabolism and suggest that the transcriptional regulatory function of this protein serves to fi.Ical energy stored in fat to drive gluconeogenesis. The liver also provides lipid to other peripheral tissues by esterifying fatty acids into triglycerides (TG) and secreting them in the form of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL). Complex regulatory mechanisms have evolved to control hepatic fatty acid utilization, trafficking, and export. However, nutrient excess and obesity perturb the ability of the liver to maintain homeostasis and these hepatic metabolic abnormalities contribute to the hyperglycemia and dyslipidemia that are prevalent in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Recent work has demonstrated that the lipin family of proteins (lipin 1, 2, and 3) are critical regulators of hepatic intermediary metabolism [1] that are strongly affected by alterations in energy homeostasis [2,3]. Lipins are bifunctional intracellular proteins that regulate fatty acid metabolism at two distinct regulatory levels. Lipins act as phosphatidic acid phosphohydrolase (PAP) enzymes that catalyze the dephosphorylation of phosphatidic acid (PA) to generate diacylglycerol (DAG); the penultimate step in triglyceride (TG) synthesis [4,5,6]. Unlike other enzymes in the TG synthetic pathway that are integral membrane proteins, lipins are solubleand contain a nuclear localization signal [7,8,9]. Lipins also act as transcriptional regulatory proteins by associating with DNAbound transcription factors to modulate their activity [7,10,11]. In liver, lipin 1 interacts with and coactivates the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor a (PPARa) and its coactivator (PPARc coactivator 1a (PGC-1a)) to enhance the expression of genes involved in fatty acid oxidation by recruiting in other coactivator proteins with histone acetyltransferase activity [10]. The effects of lipin 1 on hepatic fatty acid oxidation can proceed independent of PPARa, but not PGC-1a [10], suggesting that other transcription factor partners of PGC-1a are also involved in this response. Hepatic lipin 1 expression is robustly induced in liver by food deprivation in a PGC-1a-dependent manner [10]. The induction of lipin 1 by fasting likely serves to enhance fatty acid catabolism under fasting conditions since knockdown of lipin 1 by shRNA markedly attenuates the fasting-induced increase in the expression of fatty acid oxidation enzymes. Conversely, forced lipin 1 overexpression increases the expression of these enzymes and stimulates hepatic ketone production [10]. Mice with a genetic defect in lipin 1 (fatty liver dystrophic (fld) mice) exhibit a severe hepatic steatosis characterized by marked reductions in the expression of fatty acid oxidation enzymes [10]. Thus, lipin 1 appears to be a critical regulator of hepatic fatty acid utilization.Lipin 1 and HNFWhile it is clear that lipin 1 is a direct target gene of PGC-1a, the other components of the transcriptional complex that cooperate with PGC-1a to regulate lipin 1 expression remain unclear. Herein, we demonstrate that PGC-1a works with the hepatocyte nuclear factor 4a (HNF4a) to regulate of lipin 1 expression in liver cells. We also show that the induction of lipin 1 feeds forward to modulate HNF4a activity in a promoter-specific manner to direct this nuclear receptor to activate hepatic fatty acid oxidation while suppressing expression of genes encoding apoproteins. These data further elucidate the regulatory mechanisms by which lipin 1 controls hepatic metabolism and suggest that the transcriptional regulatory function of this protein serves to fi.