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Mimetics of caloric restriction include agonists of lipid-activated nuclear receptors.
Corton JC,
Apte U,
Anderson SP,
Limaye P,
Yoon L,
Latendresse J,
Dunn C,
Everitt JI,
Voss KA,
Swanson C,
Kimbrough C,
Wong JS,
Gill SS,
Chandraratna RA,
Kwak MK,
Kensler TW,
Stulnig TM,
Steffensen KR,
Gustafsson JA,
Mehendale HM.
ToxicoGenomics, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27514, USA. ccorton@msn.com
The obesity epidemic in industrialized countries is associated with increases in cardiovascular disease (CVD) and certain types of cancer. In animal models, caloric restriction (CR) suppresses these diseases as well as chemical-induced tissue damage. These beneficial effects of CR overlap with those altered by agonists of nuclear receptors (NR) under control of the fasting-responsive transcriptional co-activator, peroxisome proliferator-activated co-activator 1alpha (PGC-1alpha). In a screen for compounds that mimic CR effects in the liver, we found statistically significant overlaps between the CR transcript profile in wild-type mice and the profiles altered by agonists of lipid-activated NR, including peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARalpha), liver X receptor, and their obligate heterodimer partner, retinoid X receptor. The overlapping genes included those involved in CVD (lipid metabolism and inflammation) and cancer (cell fate). Based on this overlap, we hypothesized that some effects of CR are mediated by PPARalpha. As determined by transcript profiling, 19% of all gene expression changes in wild-type mice were dependent on PPARalpha, including Cyp4a10 and Cyp4a14, involved in fatty acid omega-oxidation, acute phase response genes, and epidermal growth factor receptor but not increases in PGC-1alpha. CR protected the livers of wild-type mice from damage induced by thioacetamide, a liver toxicant and hepatocarcinogen. CR protection was lost in PPARalpha-null mice due to inadequate tissue repair. These results demonstrate that PPARalpha mediates some of the effects of CR and indicate that a pharmacological approach to mimicking many of the beneficial effects of CR may be possible.
PMID: 15302862 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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