| Literature DB >> 27720451 |
Brian Finan1, Christoffer Clemmensen1, Zhimeng Zhu2, Kerstin Stemmer1, Karine Gauthier3, Luisa Müller4, Meri De Angelis5, Kristin Moreth6, Frauke Neff7, Diego Perez-Tilve8, Katrin Fischer9, Dominik Lutter1, Miguel A Sánchez-Garrido9, Peng Liu10, Jan Tuckermann10, Mohsen Malehmir11, Marc E Healy11, Achim Weber11, Mathias Heikenwalder12, Martin Jastroch9, Maximilian Kleinert13, Sigrid Jall9, Sara Brandt9, Frédéric Flamant3, Karl-Werner Schramm5, Heike Biebermann14, Yvonne Döring15, Christian Weber16, Kirk M Habegger17, Michaela Keuper18, Vasily Gelfanov2, Fa Liu19, Josef Köhrle20, Jan Rozman21, Helmut Fuchs6, Valerie Gailus-Durner6, Martin Hrabě de Angelis22, Susanna M Hofmann23, Bin Yang2, Matthias H Tschöp24, Richard DiMarchi25, Timo D Müller1.
Abstract
Glucagon and thyroid hormone (T3) exhibit therapeutic potential for metabolic disease but also exhibit undesired effects. We achieved synergistic effects of these two hormones and mitigation of their adverse effects by engineering chemical conjugates enabling delivery of both activities within one precisely targeted molecule. Coordinated glucagon and T3 actions synergize to correct hyperlipidemia, steatohepatitis, atherosclerosis, glucose intolerance, and obesity in metabolically compromised mice. We demonstrate that each hormonal constituent mutually enriches cellular processes in hepatocytes and adipocytes via enhanced hepatic cholesterol metabolism and white fat browning. Synchronized signaling driven by glucagon and T3 reciprocally minimizes the inherent harmful effects of each hormone. Liver-directed T3 action offsets the diabetogenic liability of glucagon, and glucagon-mediated delivery spares the cardiovascular system from adverse T3 action. Our findings support the therapeutic utility of integrating these hormones into a single molecular entity that offers unique potential for treatment of obesity, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.Entities:
Keywords: NASH; co-agonist; conjugate; dyslipidemia; glucagon; obesity; polypharmacology; thyroid hormone
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27720451 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2016.09.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582