Product Citations: 2

Lipolysis, the breakdown of triglyceride storage in white adipose tissue, supplies fatty acids to other tissues as a fuel under fasting conditions. In morbid obesity, fibrosis limits adipocyte expandability, resulting in enforced lipolysis, ectopic fat distribution, and ultimately insulin resistance. Although basal levels of lipolysis persist even after feeding, the regulatory mechanisms of basal lipolysis remain unclear. Here, we show the important role of adipocyte prostaglandin (PG) E2-EP4 receptor signaling in controlling basal lipolysis, fat distribution, and collagen deposition during feeding-fasting cycles. The PGE2-synthesis pathway in adipocytes, which is coupled with lipolysis, is activated by insulin during feeding. By regulating the lipolytic key players, the PGE2-EP4 pathway sustains basal lipolysis as a negative feedback loop of insulin action, and perturbation of this process leads to "metabolically healthy obesity." The potential role of the human EP4 receptor in lipid regulation was also suggested through genotype-phenotype association analyses.
Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  • Endocrinology and Physiology

Cancer-targeting alkylphosphocholine (APC) analogues are being clinically developed for diagnostic imaging, intraoperative visualization, and therapeutic applications. These APC analogues derived from chemically synthesized phospholipid ethers were identified and optimized for cancer-targeting specificity using extensive structure-activity studies. While they strongly label human brain cancers associated with disrupted blood-brain barriers (BBB), APC permeability across intact BBB remains unknown. Three of our APC analogues, CLR1404 (PET radiotracer), CLR1501 (green fluorescence), and CLR1502 (near-infrared fluorescence), were tested for permeability across a BBB model composed of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived brain microvascular endothelial cells (iPSC-derived BMECs). This in vitro BBB system has reproducibly consistent high barrier integrity marked by high transendothelial electrical resistance (TEER > 1500 Ω-cm(2)) and functional expression of drug efflux transporters. The radioiodinated and fluorescent APC analogues demonstrated fairly low permeability across the iPSC-BMEC (35 ± 5.7 (CLR1404), 54 ± 3.2 (CLR1501), and 26 ± 4.9 (CLR1502) × 10(-5) cm/min) compared with BBB-impermeable sucrose (13 ± 2.5) and BBB-permeable diazepam (170 ± 29). Only the fluorescent APC analogues (CLR1501, CLR1502) underwent BCRP and MRP polarized drug efflux transport in the brain-to-blood direction of the BBB model, and this efflux can be specifically blocked with pharmacological inhibition. None of the tested APC analogues appeared to undergo substantial P-gp transport. Limited permeability of the APC analogues across an intact BBB into normal brain likely contributes to the high tumor to background ratios observed in initial human trials. Moreover, addition of fluorescent moieties to APCs resulted in greater BMEC efflux via MRP and BCRP, and may affect fluorescence-guided applications. Overall, the characterization of APC analogue permeability across human BBB is significant for advancing future brain tumor-targeted applications of these agents.

  • Biochemistry and Molecular biology
  • Cancer Research
  • Cardiovascular biology
  • Stem Cells and Developmental Biology
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