Dehydroabietic acid alleviates high fat diet-induced insulin resistance and hepatic steatosis through dual activation of PPAR-γ and PPAR-α

Zhishen Xie(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Gai Gao(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Hui Wang(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Erwen Li(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Yong Yuan(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Jiangyan Xu(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Zhenqiang Zhang(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Pan Wang(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Yu Fu(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Huahui Zeng(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Junying Song(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Christian Hölscher(First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University), Hui Chen(University of Technology Sydney)
Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy
May 11, 2020
Cited by 52Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Dual-PPAR-α/γ agonist has the dual potentials to improve insulin resistance (IR) and hepatic steatosis associated with obesity. This study aimed to investigate whether dehydroabietic acid (DA), a naturally occurred compound, can bind to and activate both PPAR-γ and PPAR-α to ameliorate IR and hepatic steatosis in high-fat diet (HFD)-fed mice.. We found that DA formed stable hydrogen bonds with the ligand-binding domains of PPAR-γ and PPAR-α. DA treatment also promoted 3T3-L1 differentiation via PPAR-γ activation, and mitochondrial oxygen consumption in HL7702 cells via PPAR-α activation. In HFD-fed mice, DA treatment alleviated glucose intolerance and IR, and reduced hepatic steatosis, liver injury markers (ALT, AST), and lipid accumulation, and promoted mRNA expression of PPAR-γ and PPAR-α signaling elements involved in IR and lipid metabolism in vivo and in vitro, and inhibited mRNA expression of pro-inflammatory factors. Therefore, DA is a dual-PPAR-α/γ and PPAR-γ partial agonist, which can attenuate IR and hepatic steatosis induced by HFD-consumption in mice.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis