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Anti-Diabetic Compounds to Reduce Glucose Production

by Dr. Meenakshy Varier on March 28, 2017 at 4:07 PM
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Highlights

A new class of compounds that can reduce production of glucose in the liver has been identified.


The compound has been identified by a team of scientists from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI), Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School and the Yale University School of Medicine, among others, which could be the new tool for studying and treating type 2 diabetes.

‘Suppressing the overproduction of protein PGC-1α in the liver cells, using the new compound SR-18292, makes it the right target for anti-diabetes treatments.’

When one of these compounds was used in diabetic animal models, it helped significantly improve the health by:

Mechanism

The compound identified is called SR-18292. It modifies a protein known as PGC-1α.

The protein helps to bring about energy balance and controls genes involved in energy metabolism.

During fasting or starvation, the cells overexpress PGC-1, and the production of glucose in the liver increases. Using the compound, the function of PGC-1α is modified through a process called acetylation and the glucose production is reduced.

"This protein was generally considered non-druggable," said Griffin. "But the team approached the problem through the process of acetylation, which means we can influence the protein's behavior indirectly. SR-18292 increases acetylation of PGC-1, which in turn shuts down glucose production in liver cells."

Ant-diabetes treatment could aim to suppress the overproduction of the protein PGC-1αa.

"After the screening process found several potential candidates, the TSRI team designed derivatives of those initial hits," Griffin said. "We selected this compound based on its ability to induce acetylation and the fact that it had good pharmaceutical properties-so we could use it in animal models of Type 2 diabetes."

The new compound SR-18292 along with the several others developed, can be used as chemical tools to study the regulation of glucose metabolism.

The small molecules could also be developed as either a single agent to treat diabetes, or used in combination with current anti-diabetic drugs.

The study was led by Pere Puigsever of Harvard Medical School and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and included Patrick Griffin, co-chair of the TSRI Department of Molecular Medicine, and Theodore Kamenecka, TSRI Associate Professor of Molecular Medicine.

The findings are published in journal Cell.

Reference

  1. Kfir Sharabi et al. Selective Chemical Inhibition of PGC-1α Gluconeogenic Activity Ameliorates Type 2 Diabetes . Cell; (2017) DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2017.03.001


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