| Literature DB >> 21253508 |
Josep Bassaganya-Riera1, Amir J Guri, Raquel Hontecillas.
Abstract
The prevalence of obesity and its associated comorbidities has grown to epidemic proportions in the US and worldwide. Thus, developing safe and effective therapeutic approaches against these widespread and debilitating diseases is important and timely. Activation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) α, γ, and δ through several classes of pharmaceuticals can prevent or treat a variety of metabolic and inflammatory diseases, including type II diabetes (T2D). Thus, PPARs represent important molecular targets for developing novel and better treatments for a wide range of debilitating and widespread obesity-related diseases and disorders. However, available PPAR γ agonistic drugs such as Avandia have significant adverse side effects, including weight gain, fluid retention, hepatotoxicity, and congestive heart failure. An alternative to synthetic agonists of PPAR γ is the discovery and development of naturally occurring and safer nutraceuticals that may be dual or pan PPAR agonists. The purpose of this paper is to summarize the health effects of three plant-derived PPAR agonists: abscisic acid (ABA), punicic acid (PUA), and catalpic acid (CAA) in the prevention and treatment of chronic inflammatory and metabolic diseases and disorders.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21253508 PMCID: PMC3021882 DOI: 10.1155/2011/897894
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Figure 1Chemical structures of the isoprenoid abscisic acid (a) and the conjugated linolenic acid stereo- or regioisomers punicic acid- (9Z, 11E, 13E-) octadeca-9, 11, 13-trienoic acid (b) and catalpic acid- (9E, 11E, 13Z-) octadeca-9, 11, 13-trienoic acid (c).
Summary of activities of novel classes of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) agonists.
| Punicic acid | Catalpic acid | Abscisic acid | |
|---|---|---|---|
| PPAR | Yes | Yes | No |
| PPAR | Yes | No | Yes |
| PPAR | No | Unknown | No |
| PPAR | Yes | Yes | No |
| PPAR | Yes | Yes | No |
| Changes in PPAR-responsive | PPAR | PPAR | PPAR |
| Efficacy in tissue-specific | Impaired | Unknown | Impaired |
| PPAR-independent | Modulation of eicosanoid synthesis | Decreases cyclooxygenase-2 expression | Lantionine synthetase |
| Proposed utilities | Gut Anti-inflammatory | Antiobesity | Systemic anti-inflammatory |
1 PPAR α, γ, and δ reporter activity assays were conducted as previously described [22].
2 PPAR γ ligand-binding assay was performed using a commercially available competitive tracer displacement kit as previously described [42].
3 Molecular modeling and docking studies were performed as previously described [27, 43].
4 PPAR-responsive gene expression was measured in vivo as previously described [12].