| Literature DB >> 35216415 |
Jiaqi Zhao1, Ailin Zhou1, Wei Qi1.
Abstract
Obesity is an increasingly severe public health problem, which brings huge social and economic burdens. Increased body adiposity in obesity is not only tightly associated with type 2 diabetes, but also significantly increases the risks of other chronic diseases including cardiovascular diseases, fatty liver diseases and cancers. Adipogenesis describes the process of the differentiation and maturation of adipocytes, which accumulate in distributed adipose tissue at various sites in the body. The major functions of white adipocytes are to store energy as fat during periods when energy intake exceeds expenditure and to mobilize this stored fuel when energy expenditure exceeds intake. Brown/beige adipocytes contribute to non-shivering thermogenesis upon cold exposure and adrenergic stimulation, and thereby promote energy consumption. The imbalance of energy intake and expenditure causes obesity. Recent interest in epigenetics and signaling pathways has utilized small molecule tools aimed at modifying obesity-specific gene expression. In this review, we discuss compounds with adipogenesis-related signaling pathways and epigenetic modulating properties that have been identified as potential therapeutic agents which cast some light on the future treatment of obesity.Entities:
Keywords: AMPK; BMP; adipogenesis; epigenetics; obesity; sirtuin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35216415 PMCID: PMC8879274 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23042299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Compounds regulating adipogenesis through various signaling pathways. (A). Overview of the process of adipogenesis. Progenitor marked by αSMA, PDGFRα/PDGFRβ will firstly make a commitment to preadipocyte, and then differentiate into mature adipocyte. During the differentiation process, some transcription factors that are critical to adipogenesis, like PPARγ, C/EBPβ, C/EBPα et al., are required. (B). Compounds regulating adipogenesis through various signaling pathway. Adipogenesis-regulating compounds are shown in bold, and their pathway-modulating mechanisms are presented briefly. For regulated adipogenesis, the four processes including beiging, whiting, brown adipogenesis and white adipogenesis are of concern. Beiging stands for elevated thermogenic ability and increased brown adipocyte characteristics in white adipocyte or white adipose tissue. Whiting stands for the loss of thermogenic ability and brown adipocyte characteristics of brown adipocyte or brown adipose tissue. Brown adipogenesis stands for increased brown adipocyte differentiation or thermogenic ability in brown adipocytes or brown adipose tissue. White adipogenesis stands for increased white adipocyte differentiation in white adipocytes or white adipose tissue. In general, the activation of the AMPK signaling pathway through certain compounds is shown to inhibit white adipogenesis, and promote beiging of white adipogenesis and brown adipogenesis. Activation of the canonical Wnt signaling pathway through certain compounds is shown to inhibit white adipogenesis, and its inhibition is shown to promote beiging of WAT. Activation of the Hedgehog signaling pathway is shown to inhibit white adipogenesis.
Structure, pathway involved, experimental conditions and obesity-related clinical trials of compounds targeting signaling pathways with adipogenesis modulating functions.
| Compound | Structure | Pathways Involved | Experimental Conditions | Clinical Trials |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AICAR |
| AMPK signaling pathway | NCT02322073, registered | |
| A-769662 |
| AMPK signaling pathway | ||
| Metformin |
| AMPK signaling pathway | NCT02274948, completed | |
| Cyptotanshinone |
| AMPK signaling pathway | ||
| Medicarpin |
| AMPK signaling pathway | ||
| L-Theanine |
| AMPK signaling pathway | ||
| Platycodin D |
| AMPK signaling pathway | ||
| Methyl cinnamate |
| AMPK signaling pathway | ||
| Sulforaphane |
| AMPK signaling pathway | NCT04364360, recruiting | |
| Crocin |
| AMPK signaling pathway | ||
| Lithium | Wnt signaling | |||
| Indirubin-3’-oxime (I3O) |
| Wnt signaling | ||
| Kirenol |
| Wnt signaling | ||
| 13m |
| Wnt signaling | ||
| C59 |
| Wnt signaling | ||
| XAV939 |
| Wnt signaling | ||
| Hedgehog |
| Hedgehog signaling pathway | ||
| Bimagrumab | BMP signaling | NCT03005288, completed |
Figure 2Compounds regulating adipogenesis through epigenetic modification. This figure describes the key components of the epigenetic machinery and its regulation by selected epigenetic compounds. Cellular and molecular mechanisms by which epigenetic compounds might mediate the prevention of obesity through regulating adipogenesis and eventually have an influence on insulin sensitivity and energy homeostasis. This figure summarizes epigenetic regulation in debating obesity, and their potential regulation by epigenetic compounds. Almost all compounds will affect energy expenditure. Abbreviations: DNMT, DNA methyl transferase; PRC2, poly-comb repressive complex 2; HAT, histone acetyltransferase; HDAC, histone deacetylase; HDM, histone demethylase; ILs, interleukins.
Compounds modulating the epigenetic regulation of adipogenesis.
| Compound | Structure | Target | Experimental Conditions | NCT Numbers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Curcumin |
| HAT | 1. NCT04723849, | |
| C646 |
| p300/CBP | ||
| MS-275 |
| HDAC1–3 | ||
| MC1568 |
| HDAC4,5,7 | ||
| Vorinostat |
| HDAC | ||
| Resveratrol |
| SIRT1 | 1. NCT02247596, | |
| SRT1720 |
| SIRT1 activator | ||
|
|
| |||
| Ex-527 |
| SIRT1 inhibitor | ||
| GSK126 |
| EZH2/PRC2 | ||
| Hydralazine |
| DNMT1 | ||
| Procainamid |
| DNMT1 | It reduces the affinity of DNMT1 to bind DNA and SAM | |
| RG108 |
| DNMT1 | ||
|
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| DNMT1 |