| Literature DB >> 30373124 |
Yi Liu1, Jennifer K Colby2, Xiangsheng Zuo3, Jonathan Jaoude4, Daoyan Wei5, Imad Shureiqi6.
Abstract
Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-delta (PPAR-δ), one of three members of the PPAR group in the nuclear receptor superfamily, is a ligand-activated transcription factor. PPAR-δ regulates important cellular metabolic functions that contribute to maintaining energy balance. PPAR-δ is especially important in regulating fatty acid uptake, transport, and β-oxidation as well as insulin secretion and sensitivity. These salutary PPAR-δ functions in normal cells are thought to protect against metabolic-syndrome-related diseases, such as obesity, dyslipidemia, insulin resistance/type 2 diabetes, hepatosteatosis, and atherosclerosis. Given the high clinical burden these diseases pose, highly selective synthetic activating ligands of PPAR-δ were developed as potential preventive/therapeutic agents. Some of these compounds showed some efficacy in clinical trials focused on metabolic-syndrome-related conditions. However, the clinical development of PPAR-δ agonists was halted because various lines of evidence demonstrated that cancer cells upregulated PPAR-δ expression/activity as a defense mechanism against nutritional deprivation and energy stresses, improving their survival and promoting cancer progression. This review discusses the complex relationship between PPAR-δ in health and disease and highlights our current knowledge regarding the different roles that PPAR-δ plays in metabolism, inflammation, and cancer.Entities:
Keywords: PPAR-δ; cancer; inflammation; β-oxidation metabolism
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30373124 PMCID: PMC6275063 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19113339
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Ligand-dependent actions of PPAR-δ in normal versus cancer cells. Binding of PPAR-δ agonists in normal cells (left) leads to the upregulation of genes associated with a switch to using fatty acids as an energy source (increased β-oxidation). It is also associated with systemic improvements in serum glucose regulation through effects on multiple tissues, including pancreas, adipose, liver, and muscle. In cancer cells (right), this capacity for PPAR-δ to promote use of fatty acid substrates as an energy source can enhance cell survival and proliferation under harsh metabolic conditions frequently found in tumors. In addition, both COX-2 and PI3K/AKT signaling pathways are often upregulated in tumor cells. Interaction of activated PPAR-δ with these key signaling hubs leads to establishment of a feed-forward circuit promoting cancer development and progression through upregulation of additional factors that enhance neoplastic processes in cancer cells themselves as well as noncancer cells (e.g., tumor-associated macrophages) that make up the tumor microenvironment. See text for additional details.