A PPAR-alpha agonist and DPP-4 inhibitor mitigate adipocyte dysfunction in obese mice.
Daiana Araujo Santana-OliveiraAline Fernandes-da-SilvaCarolline Santos MirandaFabiane Ferreira MartinsCarlos Alberto Mandarim-de-LacerdaVanessa Souza-MelloPublished in: Journal of molecular endocrinology (2022)
Obesity causes white and brown adipocyte dysfunction, reducing browning and stimulating whitening. Drugs that tackle adipocyte dysfunction through thermogenesis stimulation could be used to treat obesity. This study sought to address whether a combination of the PPAR-alpha agonist (WY14643) and DPP4i (linagliptin) potentiates browning and mitigates adipose tissue dysfunction, emphasizing the pathways related to browning induction and the underlying thermogenesis in high-fat-fed mice. Adult male C57BL/6 mice were randomly assigned to receive a control diet (C, 10% lipids) or a high-fat diet (HF, 50% lipids) for 12 weeks. Experiment 1 aimed to evaluate whether 5 weeks of combined therapy was able to potentiate browning using a five-group design: C, HF, HFW (monotherapy with WY14643, 2.5 mg/kg body mass), HFL (monotherapy with linagliptin, 15 mg/kg body mass), and HFC (a combination of both drugs). Experiment 2 further addressed the pathways involved in browning maximization using a four-group study design: C, CC (C diet plus the drug combination), HF, and HFC (HF diet plus the drug combination). The HF group showed overweight, oral glucose intolerance, sWAT adipocyte hypertrophy, and reduced numerical density of nuclei per area of BAT confirming whitening. Only the combined treatment normalized these parameters in addition to body temperature increase, browning induction, and whitening rescue. The high expression of thermogenic marker genes parallel to reduced expression of inflammatory and endoplasmic reticulum stress genes mediated the beneficial findings. Hence, the PPAR-alpha agonist and DPP-4i combination is a promising target for obesity control by inducing functional brown adipocytes, browning of sWAT, and enhanced adaptive thermogenesis.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet induced
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- high fat diet
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- weight loss
- oxidative stress
- physical activity
- metabolic syndrome
- poor prognosis
- acute heart failure
- skeletal muscle
- combination therapy
- randomized controlled trial
- clinical trial
- fatty acid
- drug induced
- glycemic control
- gene expression
- radiation therapy
- heart failure
- emergency department
- gestational age
- transcription factor
- weight gain
- double blind
- bioinformatics analysis