TY - JOUR
T1 - Mitochondria, ciglitazone and liver: a neglected interaction in biochemical
pharmacology.
AU - Scatena, Roberto
AU - Bottoni, Patrizia
AU - Martorana, Giuseppe Ettore
AU - Vincenzoni, Federica
AU - Botta, Giorgia
AU - Pastore, Paola
AU - Giardina, Bruno
PY - 2007
Y1 - 2007
N2 - Peroxisome proliferator activated receptors (PPARs) are a class of nuclear
receptors now actively investigated for their involvement in lipid and glucidic
metabolism, immune regulation and cell differentiation. Drugs binding and
activating PPARs are therefore attracting attention for their potential
therapeutic role in various diseases like type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemias,
atherosclerosis, obesity (i.e., metabolic syndrome). Agonists of these receptors
have been already used in therapeutic protocols: fibrates (PPAR-alpha ligands)
are being used in hyperlipidemias, and thiazolidinediones (mainly PPAR-gamma
ligands) are being employed as insulin sensitizers. The latter drugs introduction
into therapy, however, showed very soon some unwanted effects (hepatotoxicity at
first and myocardiotoxicity later on) which confirmed some contradictory data
already suggested by pre-clinical trial-experiments. In this study we show that
some PPAR ligands impair mitochondrial oxidative metabolism in human liver cell
line mainly by deranging NADH oxidation. Intriguingly, the PPAR-gamma ligand
ciglitazone caused a dose-dependent inhibition of NADH-cytochrome c reductase
that resulted, at a drug concentration of 50 microM, of about 60% (P<0.001),
while other PPAR ligands with different receptor affinity - positive controls
like clofibrate (0.7 mM), gemfibrozil (0.23 mM) and bezafibrate (1 mM) - reduced
the activity of mitochondrial Complex I by about 20% (P<0.01, P<0.01 and P<0.05,
respectively). The induced mitochondrial dysfunction imposed a series of
metabolic compensatory adaptations characterized by a significant shift to
anaerobic glycolysis. These findings underline the undervalued non-genomic
effects of PPAR ligands and can provide a better understanding of the
pharmacotoxicological profiles of these drugs and of their roles in the therapy
of diabetes mellitus.
AB - Peroxisome proliferator activated receptors (PPARs) are a class of nuclear
receptors now actively investigated for their involvement in lipid and glucidic
metabolism, immune regulation and cell differentiation. Drugs binding and
activating PPARs are therefore attracting attention for their potential
therapeutic role in various diseases like type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemias,
atherosclerosis, obesity (i.e., metabolic syndrome). Agonists of these receptors
have been already used in therapeutic protocols: fibrates (PPAR-alpha ligands)
are being used in hyperlipidemias, and thiazolidinediones (mainly PPAR-gamma
ligands) are being employed as insulin sensitizers. The latter drugs introduction
into therapy, however, showed very soon some unwanted effects (hepatotoxicity at
first and myocardiotoxicity later on) which confirmed some contradictory data
already suggested by pre-clinical trial-experiments. In this study we show that
some PPAR ligands impair mitochondrial oxidative metabolism in human liver cell
line mainly by deranging NADH oxidation. Intriguingly, the PPAR-gamma ligand
ciglitazone caused a dose-dependent inhibition of NADH-cytochrome c reductase
that resulted, at a drug concentration of 50 microM, of about 60% (P<0.001),
while other PPAR ligands with different receptor affinity - positive controls
like clofibrate (0.7 mM), gemfibrozil (0.23 mM) and bezafibrate (1 mM) - reduced
the activity of mitochondrial Complex I by about 20% (P<0.01, P<0.01 and P<0.05,
respectively). The induced mitochondrial dysfunction imposed a series of
metabolic compensatory adaptations characterized by a significant shift to
anaerobic glycolysis. These findings underline the undervalued non-genomic
effects of PPAR ligands and can provide a better understanding of the
pharmacotoxicological profiles of these drugs and of their roles in the therapy
of diabetes mellitus.
KW - PPARs
KW - differentiation
KW - mitochondria
KW - PPARs
KW - differentiation
KW - mitochondria
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/8909
M3 - Article
SN - 0014-2999
SP - 50
EP - 58
JO - European Journal of Pharmacology
JF - European Journal of Pharmacology
ER -