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SLU-PP-332

4-Hydroxy-N-[(Z)-naphthalen-2-ylmethylideneamino]benzamide

Quick Stats
Studies 4
Trials 0
Score 2
2023 pubmed

Novel Pan-ERR Agonists Ameliorate Heart Failure Through Enhancing Cardiac Fatty Acid Metabolism and Mitochondrial Function.

Xu. Weiyi W; Billon. Cyrielle C; Li. Hui H; Wilderman. Andrea A; Qi. Lei L; Graves. Andrea A; Rideb. Jernie Rae Dela Cruz JRDC; Zhao. Yuanbiao Y; Hayes. Matthew M; Yu. Keyang K; Losby. McKenna M; Hampton. Carissa S CS; Adeyemi. Christiana M CM; Hong. Seok Jae SJ; Nasiotis. Eleni E; Fu. Chen C; Oh. Tae Gyu TG; Fan. Weiwei W; Downes. Michael M; Welch. Ryan D RD; Evans. Ronald M RM; Milosavljevic. Aleksandar A; Walker. John K JK; Jensen. Brian C BC; Pei. Liming L; Burris. Thomas T; Zhang. Lilei L

Key Findings

  • SLU‑PP‑332 improved ejection fraction and survival in a mouse model of pressure‑overload heart failure
  • The drug activated many genes involved in fatty‑acid breakdown and mitochondrial energy production
  • ERRÎł was identified as the primary receptor mediating these protective effects

Practical Outcomes

  • At this stage the findings are not ready for self‑experimentation; they simply suggest that targeting ERR receptors could become a future strategy for heart health. Biohackers should watch for clinical trials or approved formulations before considering any use.

Summary

Scientists made a new compound called SLU‑PP‑332 that turns on a group of proteins (ERR receptors) that help the heart use fat for energy. In mice with a type of heart failure, the drug improved heart pumping, reduced scar tissue, and helped the animals live longer, mainly by boosting mitochondrial function and fatty‑acid metabolism. However, this work is still in animals, so there’s no human dosing or safety data yet.

Abstract

Cardiac metabolic dysfunction is a hallmark of heart failure (HF). Estrogen-related receptors ERRα and ERRγ are essential regulators of cardiac metabolism. Therefore, activation of ERR could be a potential therapeutic intervention for HF. However, in vivo studies demonstrating the potential usefulness of ERR agonist for HF treatment are lacking, because compounds with pharmacokinetics appropriate for in vivo use have not been available. Using a structure-based design approach, we designed and synthesized 2 structurally distinct pan-ERR agonists, SLU-PP-332 and SLU-PP-915. We investigated the effect of ERR agonist on cardiac function in a pressure overload-induced HF model in vivo. We conducted comprehensive functional, multi-omics (RNA sequencing and metabolomics studies), and genetic dependency studies both in vivo and in vitro to dissect the molecular mechanism, ERR isoform dependency, and target specificity. Both SLU-PP-332 and SLU-PP-915 significantly improved ejection fraction, ameliorated fibrosis, and increased survival associated with pressure overload-induced HF without affecting cardiac hypertrophy. A broad spectrum of metabolic genes was transcriptionally activated by ERR agonists, particularly genes involved in fatty acid metabolism and mitochondrial function. Metabolomics analysis showed substantial normalization of metabolic profiles in fatty acid/lipid and tricarboxylic acid/oxidative phosphorylation metabolites in the mouse heart with 6-week pressure overload. ERR agonists increase mitochondria oxidative capacity and fatty acid use in vitro and in vivo. Using both in vitro and in vivo genetic dependency experiments, we show that ERRγ is the main mediator of ERR agonism-induced transcriptional regulation and cardioprotection and definitively demonstrated target specificity. ERR agonism also led to downregulation of cell cycle and development pathways, which was partially mediated by E2F1 in cardiomyocytes. ERR agonists maintain oxidative metabolism, which confers cardiac protection against pressure overload-induced HF in vivo. Our results provide direct pharmacologic evidence supporting the further development of ERR agonists as novel HF therapeutics.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-11-14T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1161/circulationaha.123.066542