脂肪沉积的热原性调节:代谢损伤早期心肾并发症可能的治疗干预展望。

IF 3.2 3区 医学 Q2 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY Molecular Pharmacology Pub Date : 2023-11-01 Epub Date: 2023-08-11 DOI:10.1124/molpharm.123.000704
Ahmed F El-Yazbi, Mohamed A Elrewiny, Hosam M Habib, Ali H Eid, Perihan A Elzahhar, Ahmed S F Belal
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引用次数: 2

摘要

糖尿病和肥胖症的心血管并发症仍然是全球发病率和死亡率的主要原因。尽管代谢性疾病的药物治疗取得了重大进展,但现有的方法并不能预防或减缓并发症的进展。此外,大多数患者在明显的代谢变化之前,在功能障碍的早期阶段表现出显著的血管受累。缺乏疾病改良疗法影响着全球数百万患者,这些并发症造成了巨大的经济负担。值得注意的是,脂肪组织炎症与代谢综合征、糖尿病和肥胖的发病机制有关。具体而言,血管周围脂肪组织(PVAT)和肾周脂肪组织(PRAT)库影响心血管和肾脏结构和功能。越来越多的证据表明,局部PVAT/PRAT炎症是对导致心肾功能障碍的代谢损伤的最早反应。线粒体解偶联蛋白1(UCP1)表达和功能的增加导致PVAT/PRAT缺氧和炎症以及血管、心脏和肾脏功能障碍。到目前为止,由于UCP1功能仍然是一个不可治愈的靶点,调节UCP1介导的PVAT/PRAT产热增强是药物开发的一个有利可图的靶点。这可以通过使用创新的蛋白水解激活嵌合分子(PROTACs)微妙地靶向降低UCP-1表达来实现,也可以通过补充磷酸肌酸来实现,磷酸肌酸增强线粒体无效的肌酸循环,从而降低UCP1活性,提高氧利用效率,并减少缺氧。一旦开发出来,这些分子将成为一流的治疗工具,直接干扰和逆转伴随早期代谢恶化的心脏、血管和肾功能障碍的最早病理学。意义声明:脂肪组织功能障碍在代谢性疾病及其并发症的发病机制中起着重要作用。尽管线粒体改变在代谢损伤中很常见,但直到最近才表明,代谢挑战的早期阶段涉及与解偶联蛋白1产热和缺氧增加相关的选定脂肪库的炎症变化。控制这种产热模式有助于减轻早期炎症和随之而来的心肾并发症。
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Thermogenic Modulation of Adipose Depots: A Perspective on Possible Therapeutic Intervention with Early Cardiorenal Complications of Metabolic Impairment.

Cardiovascular complications of diabetes and obesity remain a major cause for morbidity and mortality worldwide. Despite significant advances in the pharmacotherapy of metabolic disease, the available approaches do not prevent or slow the progression of complications. Moreover, a majority of patients present with significant vascular involvement at early stages of dysfunction prior to overt metabolic changes. The lack of disease-modifying therapies affects millions of patients globally, causing a massive economic burden due to these complications. Significantly, adipose tissue inflammation was implicated in the pathogenesis of metabolic syndrome, diabetes, and obesity. Specifically, perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT) and perirenal adipose tissue (PRAT) depots influence cardiovascular and renal structure and function. Accumulating evidence implicates localized PVAT/PRAT inflammation as the earliest response to metabolic impairment leading to cardiorenal dysfunction. Increased mitochondrial uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) expression and function lead to PVAT/PRAT hypoxia and inflammation as well as vascular, cardiac, and renal dysfunction. As UCP1 function remains an undruggable target so far, modulation of the augmented UCP1-mediated PVAT/PRAT thermogenesis constitutes a lucrative target for drug development to mitigate early cardiorenal involvement. This can be achieved either by subtle targeted reduction in UCP-1 expression using innovative proteolysis activating chimeric molecules (PROTACs) or by supplementation with cyclocreatine phosphate, which augments the mitochondrial futile creatine cycling and thus decreases UCP1 activity, enhances the efficiency of oxygen use, and reduces hypoxia. Once developed, these molecules will be first-in-class therapeutic tools to directly interfere with and reverse the earliest pathology underlying cardiac, vascular, and renal dysfunction accompanying the early metabolic deterioration. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Adipose tissue dysfunction plays a major role in the pathogenesis of metabolic diseases and their complications. Although mitochondrial alterations are common in metabolic impairment, it was only recently shown that the early stages of metabolic challenge involve inflammatory changes in select adipose depots associated with increased uncoupling protein 1 thermogenesis and hypoxia. Manipulating this mode of thermogenesis can help mitigate the early inflammation and the consequent cardiorenal complications.

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来源期刊
Molecular Pharmacology
Molecular Pharmacology 医学-药学
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
2.80%
发文量
50
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Molecular Pharmacology publishes findings derived from the application of innovative structural biology, biochemistry, biophysics, physiology, genetics, and molecular biology to basic pharmacological problems that provide mechanistic insights that are broadly important for the fields of pharmacology and toxicology. Relevant topics include: Molecular Signaling / Mechanism of Drug Action Chemical Biology / Drug Discovery Structure of Drug-Receptor Complex Systems Analysis of Drug Action Drug Transport / Metabolism
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