GLP-1-mediated delivery of tesaglitazar improves obesity and glucose metabolism in male mice
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Published:2022-08-22
Issue:8
Volume:4
Page:1071-1083
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ISSN:2522-5812
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Container-title:Nature Metabolism
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Metab
Author:
Quarta CarmeloORCID, Stemmer Kerstin, Novikoff AaronORCID, Yang BinORCID, Klingelhuber Felix, Harger Alex, Bakhti MostafaORCID, Bastidas-Ponce Aimee, Baugé Eric, Campbell Jonathan E., Capozzi Megan, Clemmensen ChristofferORCID, Collden Gustav, Cota Perla, Douros Jon, Drucker Daniel J.ORCID, DuBois Barent, Feuchtinger Annette, Garcia-Caceres CristinaORCID, Grandl Gerald, Hennuyer Nathalie, Herzig StephanORCID, Hofmann Susanna M.ORCID, Knerr Patrick J., Kulaj Konxhe, Lalloyer Fanny, Lickert HeikoORCID, Liskiewicz ArekORCID, Liskiewicz DanielaORCID, Maity Gandhari, Perez-Tilve DiegoORCID, Prakash Sneha, Sanchez-Garrido Miguel A., Zhang Qian, Staels BartORCID, Krahmer Natalie, DiMarchi Richard D.ORCID, Tschöp Matthias H.ORCID, Finan BrianORCID, Müller Timo D.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractDual agonists activating the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors alpha and gamma (PPARɑ/ɣ) have beneficial effects on glucose and lipid metabolism in patients with type 2 diabetes, but their development was discontinued due to potential adverse effects. Here we report the design and preclinical evaluation of a molecule that covalently links the PPARɑ/ɣ dual-agonist tesaglitazar to a GLP-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA) to allow for GLP-1R-dependent cellular delivery of tesaglitazar. GLP-1RA/tesaglitazar does not differ from the pharmacokinetically matched GLP-1RA in GLP-1R signalling, but shows GLP-1R-dependent PPARɣ-retinoic acid receptor heterodimerization and enhanced improvements of body weight, food intake and glucose metabolism relative to the GLP-1RA or tesaglitazar alone in obese male mice. The conjugate fails to affect body weight and glucose metabolism in GLP-1R knockout mice and shows preserved effects in obese mice at subthreshold doses for the GLP-1RA and tesaglitazar. Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry-based proteomics identified PPAR regulated proteins in the hypothalamus that are acutely upregulated by GLP-1RA/tesaglitazar. Our data show that GLP-1RA/tesaglitazar improves glucose control with superior efficacy to the GLP-1RA or tesaglitazar alone and suggest that this conjugate might hold therapeutic value to acutely treat hyperglycaemia and insulin resistance.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cell Biology,Physiology (medical),Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine
Reference42 articles.
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