Conferring liver selectivity to a thyromimetic using a novel nanoparticle increases therapeutic efficacy in a diet-induced obesity animal model Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • Abstract Optimization of metabolic regulation is a promising solution for many pathologies, including obesity, dyslipidemia, type 2 diabetes, and inflammatory liver disease. Synthetic thyroid hormone mimics–based regulation of metabolic balance in the liver showed promise but was hampered by the low biocompatibility and harmful effects on the extrahepatic axis. In this work, we show that specifically directing the thyromimetic to the liver utilizing a nanogel-based carrier substantially increased therapeutic efficacy in a diet-induced obesity mouse model, evidenced by the near-complete reversal of body weight gain, liver weight and inflammation, and cholesterol levels with no alteration in the thyroxine (T4) / thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) axis. Mechanistically, the drug acts by binding to thyroid hormone receptor β (TRβ), a ligand-inducible transcription factor that interacts with thyroid hormone response elements and modulates target gene expression. The reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) pathway is specifically implicated in the observed therapeutic effect. Overall, the study demonstrates a unique approach to restoring metabolic regulation impacting obesity and related metabolic dysfunctions.

authors

  • Wu, Ruiling
  • Prachyathipsakul, Theeraphop
  • Zhuang, Jiaming
  • Liu, Hongxu
  • Han, Yanhui
  • Liu, Bin
  • Gong, Shuai
  • Qiu, Jingyi
  • Wong, Siu
  • Ribbe, Alexander
  • Medeiros, Jewel
  • Bhagabati, Jayashree
  • Gao, Jingjing
  • Wu, Peidong
  • Dutta, Ranit
  • Herrera, Roman
  • Faraci, Steve
  • Xiao, Hang
  • Thayumanavan, S

publication date

  • August 1, 2023