| Literature DB >> 32283758 |
Yujie Shi1, Yixin Zou1, Ziyue Shen1, Yonghong Xiong1, Wenxiang Zhang1, Chang Liu1, Siyu Chen1.
Abstract
Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a constellation of metabolic derangements, including central obesity, insulin resistance, hypertension, glucose intolerance, and dyslipidemia. The pathogenesis of MetS has been intensively studied, and now many factors are recognized to contribute to the development of MetS. Among these, trace elements influence the structure of proteins, enzymes, and complex carbohydrates, and thus an imbalance in trace elements is an independent risk factor for MetS. The molecular link between trace elements and metabolic homeostasis has been established, and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) have appeared as key regulators bridging these two elements. This is because on one hand, PPARs are actively involved in various metabolic processes, such as abdominal adiposity and insulin sensitivity, and on the other hand, PPARs sensitively respond to changes in trace elements. For example, an iron overload attenuates hepatic mRNA expression of Ppar-α; zinc supplementation is considered to recover the DNA-binding activity of PPAR-α, which is impaired in steatotic mouse liver; selenium administration downregulates mRNA expression of Ppar-γ, thereby improving lipid metabolism and oxidative status in the liver of high-fat diet (HFD)-fed mice. More importantly, PPARs' expression and activity are under the control of the circadian clock and show a robust 24 h rhythmicity, which might be the reasons for the side effects and the clinical limitations of trace elements targeting PPARs. Taken together, understanding the casual relationships among trace elements, PPARs' actions, and the pathogenesis of MetS is of great importance. Further studies are required to explore the chronopharmacological effects of trace elements on the diurnal oscillation of PPARs and the consequent development of MetS.Entities:
Keywords: copper; iron; metabolic syndrome; peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors; selenium; trace elements; zinc
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32283758 PMCID: PMC7177711 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21072612
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Amount in and recommended daily intake of trace elements for humans.
| Elements | Content in the Human Body | RDI | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| iron (Fe) | 3000–5000 mg | 15 mg for man | [ |
| zinc (Zn) | 2500 mg | 15 mg for man | [ |
| copper (Cu) | 100–150 mg | 2 mg | [ |
| selenium (Se) | 14–21 mg | 50 μg | [ |
| iodine (I) | 20–50 mg | 150 μg | [ |
| molybdenum (Mo) | 9 mg | 0.1–0.5 mg | [ |
| chromium (Cr) | 6 mg | 50 μg | [ |
| cobalt (Co) | 1.1–1.5 mg | 5–45 μg | [ |
| manganese (Mn) | 12–20 mg | 2.5–7 mg | [ |
| silicon (Si) | 2000–3000 mg | 20–50 mg | [ |
| boron (B) | 50 mg | 2–20 mg | [ |
| vanadium(V) | 25 mg | 0.1–0.3 mg | [ |
| nickel (Ni) | 6–10 mg | 0.3 mg | [ |
| fluorine (F) | 2000–3000 mg | 0.5–1.0 mg | [ |
| bromine (Br) | 200 mg | 1 mg | [ |
| plumbum (Pb) | <10 μg/dL Blood | <0.1 mg | [ |
| cadmium (Cd) | <1 mg/dL Blood | <70 μg | [ |
| mercury (Hg) | <0.8 μg/dL Blood | <0.01 mg | [ |
| arsenic (As) | <1 μg/dL Blood | 1 mg | [ |
| aluminum (Al) | 50–100 mg | 1.8–8.4 mg | [ |
| stannum (Sn) | 0.38 mg/dL Blood | 0.2–3.5 mg | [ |
RDI, recommended daily intake.
Figure 1Trace elements and diseases. Overload and deficiency of multiple trace elements are closely correlated to the pathogenesis of numerous diseases. Br, Bromine; Cr, Chromium; Cu, Copper; Se, Selenium; Fe, Iron; Zn, Zinc; I, Iodine; Co, Cobalt.
Figure 2Major roles of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) isotypes in metabolic syndrome (MetS). PPARs are a class of nuclear transcriptional factors activated by physiological stimuli (fatty acids and eicosanoids) and synthetic small molecules (fibrates for PPAR-α; GW501516, GW0742, bezafibrate, and telmisartan for PPAR-β/δ; thiazolidinediones (TZDs) for PPAR-γ). PPAR-α is mainly expressed in liver tissue, where it controls a set of genes facilitating fatty acid oxidation, thereby lowering circulating triglyceride levels. PPAR-β/δ modulates a series of genes involved in energy uncoupling and fatty acid oxidation in skeletal muscle, resulting in increased energy expenditure and reduced plasma triglyceride levels. PPAR-γ is abundantly expressed during increasing adipogenesis in adipose tissues, where it governs multiple genes and thereby improves insulin sensitivity and decreases lipolysis. All the members of the PPAR family can be activated by relevant agonists. Although different PPARs have unique non-overlapping patterns of biological functions, all three isoforms act on given tissues and share similar biological functions.
Effects of trace elements on PPARs modulation in multiple diseases and models.
| Elements | Diseases or Models | Organ or Cells | Doses of Elements | Change of PPARs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fe | Hyperlipidemia, Hamsters | Liver | 10 mg/d | PPAR-α↓ [ |
| Diabetes, Rats | Pancreas | De | PPAR-β/δ↑ [ | |
| Oxidative Stress, Rats | Central Nervous System | 3 mM | PPAR-γ↑ [ | |
| Zn | Atherosclerosis | HAECs | 15 μM | PPAR-α↑ [ |
| Inflammation | PPAECs | 12 μM | PPAR-γ↑ [ | |
| Steatosis, Mice | Liver | 75 mg/L Liquid Diet | PPAR-α↑ [ | |
| Sepsis, Mice | Lung | 1.3 mg/kg BW | PPAR-γ↑ [ | |
| Cu | Rabbits | Liver, Muscle, Adipose Tissue | 5–45 mg/kg Diet | PPAR-α↑ [ |
| Pufferfish | Liver | 24–98 μg/L Water | PPAR-γ↑ [ | |
| Se | Chicken | Pancreas | 2 mg/kg Diet | PPAR-γ↑ [ |
| Infection | Mammary Gland | De | PPAR-γ↓ [ | |
| Proliferation | HaCaT Keratinocytes | 10 μM | PPAR-β/δ↑ [ | |
| PCOS, Human | Lymphocytes | 200 μg/d | PPAR-γ↑ [ | |
| Diabetes, Human | Macrophages | 100–300 μg/d | PPAR-γ↑ [ | |
| HFD-fed Mice | Liver | 0.3 μg/d Diet | PPAR-α↑, PPAR-γ↓ [ | |
| Heart Damage, Mice | Heart, H9c2 | 9 mg/L Water, 5μM | PPAR-γ↓ [ | |
| I | Mammary Cancer, Rats | Tumor | 0.05% in Water | PPAR-α↓, PPAR-γ↑ [ |
| Cr | Exercise-trained Rats | Liver, Muscle | 4 mg/kg BW | PPAR-γ↑, PPARβ/δ↑ [ |
| Diabetes, Rats | Adipose Tissue | 80 μg/kg BW | PPAR-γ↑ [ | |
| NAFLD, Mice | Liver | 80 μg/kg BW | PPAR-α↑ [ | |
| Co | Hypoxia | Trophoblast Cells | 100μM | PPAR-α/β/γ↓ [ |
| Hypoxia, Rats | Heart | 60 mg/kg BW | PPAR-α↓ [ | |
| Mn | Neurotoxicity | U87, SK-N-SH | 4 mM | PPAR-α/β/γ↓ [ |
| Oxidative Stress, Mice | Mitochondria | De | PPAR-α↑ [ | |
| Si | - | - | - | PPAR-α/β/γ↑ [ |
| V | Adipogenesis | 3T3-L1 | 2.5–10 μM | PPAR-γ↓ [ |
| db/db Mice | Adipose Tissue | 0.05 mmol/kg BW | PPAR-γ↑ [ | |
| Br | Hyperlipidemia | Hepatocytes | 1–10 μM | PPAR-α↑ [ |
| Cd | Chicken | Pancreas | 150 mg/kg Diet | PPAR-γ↓ [ |
| Hg | HFD-fed Mice | Adipocytes | 1 mg/kg BW | PPAR-α↓, PPARγ↓ [ |
| As | - | hMETSCs | 0.2–4μM | PPAR-γ↓ [ |
| Adipogenesis | C3H/10T1/2 | 6 μM | PPAR-γ↓ [ | |
| HFD-fed Mice | Liver | 3 mg/L Water | PPAR-γ↓ [ |
De, deficiency; BW, body weight; VECs, vascular endothelial cells; PPAECs, porcine pulmonary artery endothelial cells; PCOS, polycystic ovary syndrome; HFD, high-fat diet; NAFLD, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; hMSCs, human mesenchymal stem cell.