Literature DB >> 17977742

Reduction of fat deposition by combined inhibition of monoamine oxidases and semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidases in obese Zucker rats.

C Carpéné1, Z Iffiú-Soltesz, S Bour, D Prévot, P Valet.   

Abstract

Semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) and monoamine oxidases (MAO) are highly expressed in adipocytes and generate hydrogen peroxide when activated. Consequently, high concentrations of MAO- or SSAO-substrates acutely stimulate glucose transport and inhibit lipolysis in isolated adipocytes in a hydrogen peroxide-dependent manner. Chronic treatments with MAO and SSAO substrates also increase in vitro adipogenesis and in vivo glucose utilization and fat deposition in diabetic rodents. To further investigate the interplay between amine oxidases, energy balance and fat deposition, prolonged MAO and/or SSAO blockade was performed in obese rats. Pargyline (P, MAO inhibitor), semicarbazide (S, SSAO inhibitor), alone or in combination (P+S), were daily i.p. administered for 3-5 weeks to obese Zucker rats at doses ranging from 20 to 300 micromol/kg. P+S treatments abolished MAO and SSAO activities in any tested tissue. P and S led to a 12-17% reduction of food intake when given in combination but were inactive when given separately. Despite a similar body weight gain reduction in P+S-treated and pair-fed rats, the mitigation of fat deposition was greater in rats receiving both inhibitors. Adipocytes from P+S-treated rats responded as control to insulin but exhibited impaired responses to tyramine, benzylamine or methylamine plus vanadate when considering glucose transport activation or lipolysis inhibition. Although our results did not directly demonstrate that amines are able to spontaneously produce in vivo the insulin-like effects described in vitro, we propose that P+S-induced reduction of fat deposition results from decreased food intake and from impaired MAO- and SSAO-dependent lipogenic and antilipolytic actions of endogenous or alimentary amines.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17977742     DOI: 10.1016/j.phrs.2007.09.016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmacol Res        ISSN: 1043-6618            Impact factor:   7.658


  11 in total

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4.  Limited beneficial effects of piceatannol supplementation on obesity complications in the obese Zucker rat: gut microbiota, metabolic, endocrine, and cardiac aspects.

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5.  Oral Administration of Semicarbazide Limits Weight Gain together with Inhibition of Fat Deposition and of Primary Amine Oxidase Activity in Adipose Tissue.

Authors:  Josep Mercader; Zsuzsa Iffiú-Soltész; Sandy Bour; Christian Carpéné
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Review 8.  Oxidative stress in cardiovascular diseases and obesity: role of p66Shc and protein kinase C.

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9.  Dietary Phenolic Compounds Interfere with the Fate of Hydrogen Peroxide in Human Adipose Tissue but Do Not Directly Inhibit Primary Amine Oxidase Activity.

Authors:  Christian Carpéné; Mounia Hasnaoui; Balázs Balogh; Peter Matyus; Alfredo Fernández-Quintela; Víctor Rodríguez; Josep Mercader; Maria P Portillo
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10.  Metabolic Effects of Oral Phenelzine Treatment on High-Sucrose-Drinking Mice.

Authors:  Christian Carpéné; Saioa Gómez-Zorita; Alice Chaplin; Josep Mercader
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2018-09-25       Impact factor: 5.923

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