Pharmacological chaperones restore function to MC4R mutants responsible for severe early-onset obesity.
René. Patricia P; Le Gouill. Christian C; Pogozheva. Irina D ID; Lee. Gary G; Mosberg. Henry I HI; Farooqi. I Sadaf IS; Valenzano. Kenneth J KJ; Bouvier. Michel M
Key Findings
- MC4R loss‑of‑function mutations cause severe early‑onset obesity
- Cell‑permeant MC4R‑selective ligands act as pharmacological chaperones, rescuing surface expression of several mutant receptors
- One particular chaperone restored function in most tested mutants and can cross the blood‑brain barrier
Practical Outcomes
- This research is still at the cell‑culture stage, so there’s no safe dosage or protocol for self‑use yet. It signals that a future targeted therapy might become available for people with MC4R‑related obesity, but biohackers should wait for clinical trials before trying anything.
Summary
Scientists found that some small molecules can help faulty obesity‑related receptors (MC4R) get to the cell surface and work again in lab cells, hinting at a future drug that could help people with certain genetic forms of early‑onset obesity.
Abstract
Heterozygous null mutations in the melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) cause early-onset obesity in humans, indicating that metabolic homeostasis is sensitive to quantitative variation in MC4R function. Most of the obesity-causing MC4R mutations functionally characterized so far lead to intracellular retention of receptors by the cell's quality control system. Thus, recovering cell surface expression of mutant MC4Rs could have a beneficial therapeutic value. We tested a pharmacological chaperone approach to restore cell surface expression and function of 10 different mutant forms of human melanocortin-4 receptor found in obese patients. Five cell-permeant MC4R-selective ligands were tested and displayed pharmacological chaperone activities, restoring cell surface targeting and function of the receptors with distinct efficacy profiles for the different mutations. Such mutation-specific efficacies suggested a structure-activity relationship between compounds and mutant receptor conformations that may open a path toward personalized therapy. In addition, one of the five pharmacological chaperones restored function to most of the mutant receptors tested. Combined with its ability to reach the central nervous system and its selectivity for the MC4R, this pharmacological chaperone may represent a candidate for the development of a targeted therapy suitable for a large subset of patients with MC4R-deficient obesity.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-09-08T00:00:00.000Z
10.1124/jpet.110.172098
87
48