| Literature DB >> 32390830 |
Francisco Díaz-Castro1, Matías Monsalves-Álvarez1,2, Leonel E Rojo3,4, Andrea Del Campo5, Rodrigo Troncoso1,2.
Abstract
A growing body of research indicates that cortisol, the glucocorticoid product of the activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, plays a role in the pathophysiology of metabolic syndrome. In this regard, chronic exposure to cortisol is associated with risk factors related to metabolic syndrome like weight gain, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, among others. Mifepristone is the only FDA-approved drug with antiglucocorticoids properties for improved the glycemic control in patients with type 2 patients secondary to endogenous Cushing's syndrome. Mifepristone also have been shown positive effects in rodents models of diabetes and patients with obesity due to antipsychotic treatment. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms are not fully understood. In this perspective, we summarized the literature regarding the beneficial effects of mifepristone in metabolic syndrome from animal studies to clinical research. Also, we propose a potential mechanism for the beneficial effects in insulin sensitivity which involved the regulation of mitochondrial function in muscle cells.Entities:
Keywords: RU486; glycaemia; insulin resistance; mitochondria; skeletal muscle
Year: 2020 PMID: 32390830 PMCID: PMC7193078 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2020.00429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Mifepristone effects in model of metabolic syndrome.
| Reference | Model | Mifepristone doses/via administration/treatment time | Insulin sensivity effect | Glycemic effect | Weight Changes | Other effects | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| High fat diet and high starch diet (rats) | 30 mg • kg-1 • day-1/In the food/25 days |
|
|
| N/A | Mifepristone reverse the insulin resistance induced by HFD. In skeletal muscle, mifepristone produced the major effect. |
|
| ob/ob mice | 30 mg • kg • day/subcutaneously injection/21 days | N/A |
|
| N/A | Mifepristone reduce fasting glucose amd insulin levels in ob/ob mice. |
|
| ob/ob mice | 30 mg • kg • day/subcutaneously injection/28 days |
|
| = | N/A | – |
|
| Olanzapine traetment (human) | 600 mg • day/oral/14 days | = | = |
| ↓ Waist circumference | Mifepristone reduced weight gain. |
|
| Risperidone traetment (human) | 600 mg • day/oral/28 days |
| N/A |
| ↓Triglycerides | Mifepristone reduced HOMA-IR. |
|
| High fat diet (mice) | 0.1 - 1.0 and 30 mg • kg • day/Orally/22 weeks |
|
|
| ↑ adiponectin secretion | The higher effects were seen with a dose of 30mg • kg • day of mifepristone |
|
| MIF-KO mice | 20 mg • kg • day/N/A/7 days |
|
| N/A | N/A | Mifepristone increased the phosphorylation induced by insulin in liver. |
|
| High fat fructose diet (mice) | 60 mg • kg • day/in the food/4 weeks | N/A |
|
| ↓ fat mass | Mifepristone reduced the inhibition of lipolysis by insulin |
|
| High fructose diet (mice) | 20 mg • kg • day/oral gavage/18 days | N/A |
|
| ↓ Liver weight | Mifepristone reduced GC-target genes in liver. |
|
| L6 myotubes (rat) | 10 µM/24 h |
|
| N/A | ↓Oxygen consumption ↓Intracellular ATP | The RU486 increase insulin sensitivity through AMPK activation |
↑ increase; ↓ decrease; = not change; N/A not assessed.
Figure 1Mifepristone targets mitochondria. (A) Time course of mifepristone on mitochondrial morphology. Cells were incubated with mifepristone (10 uM) at indicated times and then loaded with MitoTracker Orange. Multislice imaging reconstitution was obtained by confocal microscopy. The scale bar is 10 μm. The individual mitochondrial volume and number of mitochondria per cell were determined. (B) Left panel: Representative immunoblot of the effect of mifepristone treatment in MNF2, DRP1, CV-ATP5A, CIII-UQCR2, mtHSP70, and tubulin protein levels; Right panel: Densitometry analysis. (mean ± SEM; n 4). *p < 0.05 versus control.