Researchers from The
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San
Antonio) have developed a small-molecule drug that prevents weight gain and
adverse liver changes in mice fed a high-sugar, high-fat Western diet
throughout life.
“When we give this drug to the mice for
a short time, they start losing weight. They all become slim,” said Madesh Muniswamy, PhD, professor of medicine in the health science
center’s Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long School of Medicine.
Findings by the collaborators, also from
the University of Pennsylvania and Cornell University, were published Feb. 27
in the high-impact journal Cell Reports. Muniswamy, director of the Center for Mitochondrial Medicine at UT
Health San Antonio, is the senior author.
Fourth
most common element
The research team discovered the drug by
first exploring how magnesium impacts metabolism, which is the production and
consumption of energy in cells. This energy, called ATP, fuels the body’s
processes.
Magnesium is the fourth most abundant
element in the body after calcium, potassium and sodium, and plays many key
roles in good health, including regulating blood sugar and blood pressure and
building bones. But the researchers found that too much magnesium slows energy
production in mitochondria, which are cells’ power plants.
“It puts the brake on, it just slows
down,” said co-lead author Travis R. Madaris, doctoral student in the Muniswamy
laboratory at UT Health San Antonio.
Deleting MRS2, a gene that promotes
magnesium transport into the mitochondria, resulted in more efficient
metabolism of sugar and fat in the power plants. The result: skinny, healthy
mice.
Liver and adipose (fat) tissues in the
rodents showed no evidence of fatty liver disease, a complication related to
poor diet, obesity and type 2 diabetes.
Small-molecule
agent
The drug, which the researchers call
CPACC, accomplishes the same thing. It restricts the amount of magnesium
transfer into the power plants. In experiments, the result was again: skinny,
healthy mice. UT Health San Antonio has filed a patent application on the drug.
The mice served as a model system of
long-term dietary stress precipitated by the calorie-rich, sugary and fatty
Western diet. The familiar results of this stress are obesity, type 2 diabetes
and cardiovascular complications.
“Lowering the mitochondrial magnesium
mitigated the adverse effects of prolonged dietary stress,” said co-lead author
Manigandan Venkatesan, PhD, postdoctoral fellow in the Muniswamy lab.
Joseph A. Baur, PhD, of the University
of Pennsylvania and Justin J. Wilson, PhD, of Cornell are among the
collaborators. “We came up with the small molecule and Justin synthesized it,”
Madaris said.
Significant
implications
“These findings are the result of several years of work,” Muniswamy said. “A drug that can reduce the risk of cardiometabolic diseases such as heart attack and stroke, and also reduce the incidence of liver cancer, which can follow fatty liver disease, will make a huge impact. We will continue its development.”
Source: https://news.uthscsa.edu/novel-drug-makes-mice-slim-even-on-sugary-fatty-diet/
Journal article: https://neurosciencenews.com/weight-reduction-molecule-22845/
Image: Mitochondria in a single heart cell. Mitochondria
highlighted in red were exposed to ultraviolet light. Credit: National Heart,
Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health
Source: Novel drug makes mice slim even on sugary, fatty diet – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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