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Penn Study Shows How Next-Generation Diabetic
Drugs Could Work More Selectively
Understanding Molecular Double Action of TZDs To Reduce Side Effects
(Philadelphia, PA) – In an attempt to find a new generation of
diabetic drugs that will minimize side effects, researchers at the University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine report a new understanding
of how thiazolidinediones (TZDs), widely used diabetic medications, work
in fat cells. With yearly sales exceeding billions of dollars, TZDs –
such as rosiglitazone maleate (Avandia) and pioglitazone hydrochloride
(Actos) – help to maintain diabetics’ blood-sugar levels.
In fat cells, TZDs turn on a small set of genes, which aren’t normally
turned on, by targeting the receptor PPARγ. To tease out how the
medications work specifically, the investigators set out to determine
the difference between the genes that are ordinarily turned on in fat
cells and the genes that are turned on only when diabetics are given the
TZDs.
A new study from the laboratory of Mitchell Lazar, MD, PhD,
Director of the Institute for Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism at Penn,
has found that PPARγ can turn genes both on and off. “What
regulates it, in this case, is the drug, which is acting as a switch to
turn genes on,” says Lazar. “This paper shows that we can
separate the two different aspects of the drug’s action on fat cells.”
These findings appear in the January 28th
online edition of Genes & Development and will appear in
the February 15th print issue.
Knowing how to turn a gene off may permit researchers to develop drugs
that would decrease TZD-related side effects such as weight gain and edema.
Indeed, preclinical research is already underway to design drugs called
SPPARMs, selective PPARγ modulators, which would specifically target
genes in fat cells that can turn off the molecular pathways that may lead
to these serious side effects.
Working with mouse fat cells, Lazar’s study suggests that one way
to get gene-selective actions would be to target this ability to turn
off genes without affecting the ability to turn others on. “Since
these are separate processes, one through one type of molecular action
and one through another, our work shows that this is feasible,”
says Lazar.
How would a SPPARM work? TZDs turn genes on and off by working with molecules
called coactivators and corepressors. In addition to its beneficial role,
TZDs turn fibroblasts into fat cells by enlisting more coactivators than
normal, thus leading to weight gain. The goal is to design a SPPARM that
will reduce interaction with corepressors, but increase interaction with
coactivators, to separate anti-diabetic effects and weight gain.
“We should be optimistic about finding a new type of drug with the
same fat-cell target as TZDs, but which is a selective regulator of gene
expression in such a way that will increase the benefit-to-risk ratio
of the diabetes treatment,” says Lazar.
This research was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health
and an unrestricted Bristol Myers Squibb Freedom to Discover Award in
Metabolic Research. Other Penn investigators contributing to this research
are: Hong-Ping Guan, Takahiro Ishizuka, and Patricia C. Chui, and Michael
Lehrke. The authors report no conflicting financial interests.
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