Literature DB >> 35778847

Structurally-engineered fatty acid 1024 (SEFA-1024) improves diet-induced obesity, insulin resistance, and fatty liver disease.

Jordon D Secor1,2, Bennet S Cho1,2, Lumeng J Yu1,2, Amy Pan1,2, Victoria H Ko1,2, Duy T Dao1,2, Michael Feigh3, Lorenzo Anez-Bustillos1,2, Gillian L Fell1,2, David A Fraser4, Kathleen M Gura5, Mark Puder1,2.   

Abstract

Obesity is a global epidemic that drives morbidity and mortality through cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). No definitive therapy has been approved to improve glycemic control and treat NAFLD in obese patients. Here, we investigated a semi-synthetic, long chain, structurally-engineered fatty acid-1024 (SEFA-1024), as a treatment for obesity-induced hyperglycemia, insulin-resistance, and fatty liver disease in rodent models. A single dose of SEFA-1024 was administered to evaluate glucose tolerance and active glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) in lean rats in the presence and absence of a DPP-4 inhibitor. The effects of SEFA-1024 on weight loss and glycemic control were assessed in genetic (ob/ob) and environmental (high-fat diet) murine models of obesity. Liver histology, serum liver enzymes, liver lipidomics, and hepatic gene expression were also assessed in the high-fat diet murine model. SEFA-1024 reversed obesity-associated insulin resistance and improved glycemic control. SEFA-1024 increased active GLP-1. In a long-term model of diet-induced obesity, SEFA-1024 reversed excessive weight gain, hepatic steatosis, elevated liver enzymes, hepatic lipotoxicity, and promoted fatty acid metabolism. SEFA-1024 is an enterohepatic-targeted, eicosapentaenoic acid derivative that reverses obesity-induced dysregulated glucose metabolism and hepatic lipotoxicity in genetic and dietary rodent models of obesity. The mechanism by which SEFA-1024 works may include increasing aGLP-1, promoting fatty acid oxidation, and inhibiting hepatic triglyceride formation. SEFA-1024 may serve as a potential treatment for obesity-related diabetes and NAFLD.
© 2022 AOCS.

Entities:  

Keywords:  fatty acid metabolism; free fatty acid receptors (FFARs); high-fat diet (HFD); hyperglycemia; hyperinsulinemia; lipidomics; lipotoxicity; obesity; structurally-engineered fatty acid (SEFA)

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35778847      PMCID: PMC9463121          DOI: 10.1002/lipd.12351

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lipids        ISSN: 0024-4201            Impact factor:   1.646


  32 in total

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