| Literature DB >> 31936548 |
Dimitri Papukashvili1, Nino Rcheulishvili1, Yulin Deng1,2.
Abstract
Obesity is a worldwide prevalent metabolic disorder that is associated with diabetes, among many other diseases. Bearing this in mind, prevention and treatment ways need to be improved. Notably, activity of the enzyme semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) is found to be elevated in overweight subjects. Moreover, SSAO inhibition has resulted in an increase of histamine activity in adipose tissue and the limitation of body fat. The current review aims to overview the risks of obesity, rationalize the molecular ways of SSAO activity, and outline the strategies of inhibiting upregulated enzyme levels. It describes the differences between SSAO inhibitors and advances the prospective agents. Based on evidence, caffeine is proposed as an effective, safe, and reliable choice to inhibit SSAO activity. Furthermore, the histamine in adipocytes has been associated with SSAO activity. Therefore, it is suggested as one of the key compounds to be studied for obesity management. To conclude, inhibiting SSAO may attenuate weight gain and prevent related diseases.Entities:
Keywords: caffeine; diabetes; histamine; obesity; semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO)
Year: 2020 PMID: 31936548 PMCID: PMC7019322 DOI: 10.3390/nu12010184
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Description of semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase/vascular adhesion protein-1 (SSAO/VAP-1) inhibitors according to chemical and pharmacological properties.
| Names of VAP-1/SSAO Inhibitors | Chemical Structure/Formula | Molecular Weight/Molar Weight | Solubility | Pharmacokinetic Profile | IC50 | Efficacy/Anti-Obesity Property | Toxicity | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral Dose | i.v./i.p. Dose | ||||||||
| PXS-4728A/BI1467335 |
| 316.8014 kDa | DMSO and H2O >10 mg/mL | 6 mg.kg−1 | 3 mg.kg−1 | 5 nM | Potent and orally available inhibitor of VAP-1, showing >500-fold selectivity for VAP-1/SSAO over all the related human amine oxidases. Diminishes lung inflammation. It is in clinical trials for the treatment of cardio-metabolic diseases. It shows significant reduction of body weight gain in rabbits. | No/Low | Wang et al. [ |
| PXS-4681A |
| 342.84 kDa | H2O 2 mg/mL | 20 mg.kg−1 | 10 mg.kg−1 | <10 nM | Potent and highly selective irreversible inhibitor of SSAO/VAP-1 that exhibits anti-inflammatory effects in vivo. It is a derivative of Mofegiline. PXS-4681A was used to inhibit LPS induced brain inflammation. | No/Low | Becchi et al. [ |
| Semicarbazide |
| 75.07 g/mol | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | An irreversible and probably suicide SSAO inhibitor. It limits weight gain and fat accumulation. | Yes/High | Mercader et al. [ |
| LJP-1586 |
| 231.69 kDa | DMSO | 10 mg/kg | N/A | 4–43 nM | Potent, selective, and orally active inhibitor of SSAO activity, inhibiting vascular adhesion protein 1 (VAP-1) activity and decreasing the density of macrophages in inflamed atherosclerotic plaques in mice LJP. | Yes | O’Rourke et al. [ |
| Caffeine |
| 194.19 g/mol | H2O | N/A | N/A | 0.8 ± 0.3 nM | Efficiency of caffeine on adipose and aorta is especially high. It can play an important role in treating diseases associated with SSAO activities. Independently from SSAO inhibition, it is found to be effective in losing weight. | No/Low | Che et al. [ |
| Simvastatin |
| 418.6 g/mol | DMSO and H2O | N/A | 20 mg.kg−1 | N/A | Simvastatin blocks SSAO/VAP-1 release, among other known actions, therefore preventing this cascade of events. | Yes | Sun et al. [ |
| Phenylhydrazine |
| 108.14 g/mol | H2O | N/A | N/A | 30 nM | Irreversible SSAO inhibitor. | Yes/High | Carpene et al. [ |
| Phenelzine |
| 136.19 g/mol | H2O | 30 mg.kg−1 | 88.9 µmol/kg | N/A | Potent inhibitor of SSAO. | Yes | Carpene et al. [ |
Figure 1Illustration of SSAO involvement in weight gain and associated pathologies (on the left); beneficial health outcomes of SSAO inhibition and the dual mechanism of caffeine in diminishing weight gain (on the right). Notes: SSAO, semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase; SSAO-i, SSAO-inhibitor; PDE, phosphodiesterase; cAMP, cyclic adenosine monophosphate; ↑, upregulation; ↓, downregulation.
Caffeine content in popular food products.
| Food and Beverages | Serving Size | Caffeine Content (mg) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coffee | Cappelletti et al. [ | ||
| Instant | 180 mL | 90 | |
| Instant decaffeinated | 3 | ||
| Drip brewed | 100 | ||
| Brewed decaffeinated | 5 | ||
| Brewed | 5 oz | 135 | Harland et al. [ |
| Roasted and ground, drip | 112 | ||
| Tea | Cappelletti et al. [ | ||
| Green | 180 mL | 35 | |
| Black | 70 | ||
| Cocoa | |||
| Cocoa beverages | 180 mL | 13 | |
| Energy drinks | Kole et al. [ | ||
| Red Bull | 8.4 oz | 80 | |
| Sodas | Harland et al. [ | ||
| Coca-Cola | 12 oz | 46 | |
| Pepsi | 38 | ||
| Chocolates | Nehlig [ | ||
| Dark chocolate | 50 g | 35–200 | |
| Milk chocolate | 14 | ||
Studies of caffeine-caused weight loss.
| Title | Type of Study | Synergistic Effect | Impact of Weight Loss | Number of Subjects | Doses of Caffeine | Gender | Age | Summary | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antioxidant-rich Coffee Reduces DNA Damage, Elevates Glutathione Status and Contributes to Weight Control: Results from an Intervention Study | Human | No | High | 33 | 3–4 cups brewed | Male | 20–44 y | 3–4 cups of coffee daily reduces oxidative damage, body fat and ameliorates energy uptake | Bakuradze et al. [ |
| Oral Intake of a Combination of Glucosyl Hesperidin and Caffeine Elicits an Antiobesity Effect in Healthy, Moderately Obese Subjects: a Randomized Double-blind Placebo-Controlled Trial | Human | Yes (Glucosyl-hesperidin) | High | 75 | 50–75 mg | N/A | N/A | 500 mg G-hesperidin and 75 mg caffeine together reduces body fat | Ohara et al. [ |
| A Combination of Glucosyl Hesperidin and Caffeine Exhibits an Anti-obesity Effect by Inhibition of Hepatic Lipogenesis in Mice | Mice | Yes | High | N/A | N/A | Male | 8 weeks | Caffeine + G-hesperidin effectively reduces body fat accumulation | Ohara et al. [ |
| Caffeine Attenuated ER Stress-induced Leptin Resistance in Neurons | Cell culture | No | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Caffeine may attenuate leptin resistance, thus, diminish obesity | Hosoi et al. [ |
| Anti-obesity Effects of Three Major Components of Green Tea, Catechins, Caffeine and Theanine, in Mice | Mice | Yes | High | 100 | N/A | Female | 4 weeks | Caffeine + catechins suppress body weight and fat accumulation | Zheng et al. [ |
| Anti-obesity Effect of a Novel Caffeine-Loaded Dissolving Microneedle Patch in High-fat Diet-induced Obese C57BL/6J Mice | Mice | N/A | High | N/A | N/A | Female | 6 weeks | Novel caffeine loaded dissolving microneedle patch- CMP has therapeutic property in obesity | Dangol et al. [ |
| Caffeine Inhibits Hypothalamic A1R to Excite Oxytocin Neuron and Ameliorate Dietary Obesity in Mice | Mice | No | High | N/A | 60 mg.kg −1 | Male | 6 weeks | Caffeine administration by central or peripheral route suppresses appetite, increases energy expenditure, and reduces the body weight | Wu et al. [ |
| Effect of Chronic Coffee Consumption on Weight Gain and Glycaemia in a Mouse Model of Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes | Mice | No | High | N/A | N/A | Both | N/A | Regular coffee intake retards weight gain in high-fat diet mice and abolishes weight gain in normal diet mice | Rustenbeck et al. [ |
| Caffeine Intake is Related to Successful Weight Loss Maintenance | Human | No | N/A | 494/2129 | 1–7 cups of caffeinated beverages | Both | 47.6/45.3 y | Consumption of caffeinated beverages might support weight loss maintenance | Icken et al. [ |
| Body Weight Loss and Weight Maintenance in Relation to Habitual Caffeine Intake and Green Tea Supplementation | Human | Yes | High | 76 | 150 mg/day | Both | 18–68 | Green tea-caffeine mixture intake ameliorates weight maintenance and weight loss | Westerterp-Plantenga et al. [ |