Mechanisms of peroxisome proliferator activated receptor γ regulation by non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.

Nuclear receptor signaling Pub Date : 2015-10-05 eCollection Date: 2015-01-01 DOI:10.1621/nrs.13004
Ana C Puhl, Flora A Milton, Aleksandra Cvoro, Douglas H Sieglaff, Jéssica C L Campos, Amanda Bernardes, Carly S Filgueira, Jan Lammel Lindemann, Tuo Deng, Francisco A R Neves, Igor Polikarpov, Paul Webb
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引用次数: 63

Abstract

Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) display anti-inflammatory, antipyretic and analgesic properties by inhibiting cyclooxygenases and blocking prostaglandin production. Previous studies, however, suggested that some NSAIDs also modulate peroxisome proliferator activated receptors (PPARs), raising the possibility that such off target effects contribute to the spectrum of clinically relevant NSAID actions. In this study, we set out to understand how peroxisome proliferator activated receptor-γ (PPARγ/PPARG) interacts with NSAIDs using X-ray crystallography and to relate ligand binding modes to effects on receptor activity. We find that several NSAIDs (sulindac sulfide, diclofenac, indomethacin and ibuprofen) bind PPARγ and modulate PPARγ activity at pharmacologically relevant concentrations. Diclofenac acts as a partial agonist and binds to the PPARγ ligand binding pocket (LBP) in typical partial agonist mode, near the β-sheets and helix 3. By contrast, two copies of indomethacin and sulindac sulfide bind the LBP and, in aggregate, these ligands engage in LBP contacts that resemble agonists. Accordingly, both compounds, and ibuprofen, act as strong partial agonists. Assessment of NSAID activities in PPARγ-dependent 3T3-L1 cells reveals that NSAIDs display adipogenic activities and exclusively regulate PPARγ-dependent target genes in a manner that is consistent with their observed binding modes. Further, PPARγ knockdown eliminates indomethacin activities at selected endogenous genes, confirming receptor-dependence of observed effects. We propose that it is important to consider how individual NSAIDs interact with PPARγ to understand their activities, and that it will be interesting to determine whether high dose NSAID therapies result in PPAR activation.

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非甾体抗炎药调控过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体γ的机制。
非甾体类抗炎药(NSAIDs)通过抑制环氧化酶和阻断前列腺素的产生而表现出抗炎、解热和镇痛的特性。然而,先前的研究表明,一些非甾体抗炎药也可以调节过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体(PPARs),这提高了这种脱靶效应可能有助于临床相关的非甾体抗炎药作用谱。在这项研究中,我们开始利用x射线晶体学了解过氧化物酶体增殖体激活受体-γ (PPARγ/PPARG)如何与非甾体抗炎药相互作用,并将配体结合模式与受体活性的影响联系起来。我们发现几种非甾体抗炎药(sulindac sulfide,双氯芬酸,吲哚美辛和布洛芬)结合PPARγ并以药理学上相关的浓度调节PPARγ活性。双氯芬酸作为部分激动剂,以典型的部分激动剂模式结合到PPARγ配体结合袋(LBP)上,靠近β-片和螺旋3。相比之下,两个拷贝的吲哚美辛和sulindac硫化物结合LBP,总的来说,这些配体参与LBP接触,类似于激动剂。因此,这两种化合物和布洛芬都是强效部分激动剂。对ppar γ依赖性3T3-L1细胞中NSAID活性的评估显示,NSAID具有成脂活性,并以与其观察到的结合模式一致的方式专门调节ppar γ依赖性靶基因。此外,PPARγ敲低消除了在所选内源性基因上的吲哚美辛活性,证实了所观察到的效应的受体依赖性。我们建议考虑个体NSAID如何与PPARγ相互作用以了解其活性是重要的,并且确定高剂量NSAID治疗是否导致PPAR激活将是有趣的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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