MLR-1023 Treatment in Mice and Humans Induces a Thermogenic Program, and Menthol Potentiates the Effect

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TitreMLR-1023 Treatment in Mice and Humans Induces a Thermogenic Program, and Menthol Potentiates the Effect
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuteursRebello CJ, Coulter AA, Reaume AG, Cong W, Cusimano LA, Greenway FL
JournalPHARMACEUTICALS
Volume14
Pagination1196
Date PublishedNOV
Type of ArticleArticle
Mots-clésbeige fat, Blood glucose, body weight, Insulin sensitivity, Menthol, MLR-1023, Thermogenesis, UCP1
Résumé

A glucose-lowering medication that acts by a different mechanism than metformin, or other approved diabetes medications, can supplement monotherapies when patients fail to meet blood glucose goals. We examined the actions underlying the effects of an insulin sensitizer, tolimidone (MLR-1023) and investigated its effects on body weight. Diet-induced obesity (CD1/ICR) and type 2 diabetes (db/db) mouse models were used to study the effect of MLR-1023 on metabolic outcomes and to explore its synergy with menthol. We also examined the efficacy of MLR-1023 alone in a clinical trial (NCT02317796), as well as in combination with menthol in human adipocytes. MLR-1023 produced weight loss in humans in four weeks, and in mice fed a high-fat diet it reduced weight gain and fat mass without affecting food intake. In human adipocytes from obese donors, the upregulation of Uncoupling Protein 1, Glucose (UCP)1, adiponectin, Glucose Transporter Type 4 (GLUT4), Adipose Triglyceride Lipase (ATGL), Carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 beta (CPT1 beta), and Transient Receptor Potential Melastin (TRPM8) mRNA expression suggested the induction of thermogenesis. The TRPM8 agonist, menthol, potentiated the effect of MLR-1023 on the upregulation of genes for energy expenditure and insulin sensitivity in human adipocytes, and reduced fasting blood glucose in mice. The amplification of the thermogenic program by MLR-1023 and menthol in the absence of adrenergic activation will likely be well-tolerated, and bears investigation in a clinical trial.

DOI10.3390/ph14111196