Anti-ageing effects of FDA-approved medicines: a focused review

Author:

Thanapairoje Koranit12,Junsiritrakhoon Supanut12,Wichaiyo Surasak23ORCID,Osman Mohd Azuraidi4ORCID,Supharattanasitthi Wasu12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Pharmacy , Mahidol University , Bangkok , Thailand

2. Faculty of Pharmacy , Centre of Biopharmaceutical Science for Healthy Ageing, Mahidol University , Bangkok , Thailand

3. Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Pharmacy , Mahidol University , Bangkok , Thailand

4. Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences , Universiti Putra Malaysia , Selangor Darul Ehsan , Malaysia

Abstract

Abstract Ageing is the process generated by senescent cells, free radicals, inflammation and other relevant factors. Ageing contributes to age-related diseases that affect the quality of life. People are interested in anti-ageing intervention and many scientists attempt to search for anti-ageing medicines. This review focused on describing in vivo anti-ageing activity of US-FDA-approved drugs and found that alogliptin, canagliflozin and metformin might produce anti-ageing activity via AMPK activation. Rapamycin and canagliflozin are capable to inhibit mTOR to promote lifespan. Atracurium, carnitine and statins act as DAF-16 activators, which potentially contribute to anti-ageing activity. Hydralazine, lisinopril, rosiglitazone and zidovudine may help stabilize genomic integrity to prolong life expectancy. Other indirect mechanisms, including insulin-lowering effect by acarbose and calcium channel blocking activity by verapamil may also promote longevity. Interestingly, some drugs (i.e., canagliflozin, metformin, rapamycin and acarbose) are likely to demonstrate a lifespan-promoting effect predominantly in male animals. These pre-clinical data might provide mechanistic and phenotypic perspectives to better understand the targets of anti-ageing interventions.

Funder

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Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Drug Discovery,Pharmacology,General Medicine,Physiology

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