Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.
Gilead Sciences Inc., Foster City, CA.
Hepatology. 2018 Dec;68(6):2197-2211. doi: 10.1002/hep.30097.
Pharmacologic inhibition of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) enzymes, ACC1 and ACC2, offers an attractive therapeutic strategy for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) through simultaneous inhibition of fatty acid synthesis and stimulation of fatty acid oxidation. However, the effects of ACC inhibition on hepatic mitochondrial oxidation, anaplerosis, and ketogenesis in vivo are unknown. Here, we evaluated the effect of a liver-directed allosteric inhibitor of ACC1 and ACC2 (Compound 1) on these parameters, as well as glucose and lipid metabolism, in control and diet-induced rodent models of NAFLD. Oral administration of Compound 1 preferentially inhibited ACC enzymatic activity in the liver, reduced hepatic malonyl-CoA levels, and enhanced hepatic ketogenesis by 50%. Furthermore, administration for 6 days to high-fructose-fed rats resulted in a 20% reduction in hepatic de novo lipogenesis. Importantly, long-term treatment (21 days) significantly reduced high-fat sucrose diet-induced hepatic steatosis, protein kinase C epsilon activation, and hepatic insulin resistance. ACCi treatment was associated with a significant increase in plasma triglycerides (approximately 30% to 130%, depending on the length of fasting). ACCi-mediated hypertriglyceridemia could be attributed to approximately a 15% increase in hepatic very low-density lipoprotein production and approximately a 20% reduction in triglyceride clearance by lipoprotein lipase (P ≤ 0.05). At the molecular level, these changes were associated with increases in liver X receptor/sterol response element-binding protein-1 and decreases in peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-α target activation and could be reversed with fenofibrate co-treatment in a high-fat diet mouse model. Conclusion: Collectively, these studies warrant further investigation into the therapeutic utility of liver-directed ACC inhibition for the treatment of NAFLD and hepatic insulin resistance.
药理学抑制乙酰辅酶 A 羧化酶(ACC)酶,ACC1 和 ACC2,通过同时抑制脂肪酸合成和刺激脂肪酸氧化,为非酒精性脂肪性肝病(NAFLD)提供了一种有吸引力的治疗策略。然而,ACC 抑制对体内肝线粒体氧化、氨甲酰磷酸合成和酮生成的影响尚不清楚。在这里,我们评估了肝靶向 ACC1 和 ACC2 的变构抑制剂(化合物 1)对这些参数以及控制和饮食诱导的啮齿动物模型中 NAFLD 的葡萄糖和脂质代谢的影响。化合物 1 的口服给药优先抑制肝脏中的 ACC 酶活性,降低肝丙二酰辅酶 A 水平,并使肝酮生成增加 50%。此外,在高果糖喂养的大鼠中连续给药 6 天可使肝从头脂肪生成减少 20%。重要的是,长期治疗(21 天)可显著降低高脂肪蔗糖饮食诱导的肝脂肪变性、蛋白激酶 C epsilon 激活和肝胰岛素抵抗。ACCi 治疗与血浆甘油三酯显著增加(取决于禁食时间的长短,约增加 30%至 130%)有关。ACCi 介导的高甘油三酯血症可能归因于肝极低密度脂蛋白产生增加约 15%,脂蛋白脂肪酶清除甘油三酯减少约 20%(P ≤ 0.05)。在分子水平上,这些变化与肝 X 受体/固醇反应元件结合蛋白-1 的增加以及过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体-α 靶激活的减少有关,并可在高脂肪饮食小鼠模型中用非诺贝特共同治疗逆转。结论:综上所述,这些研究进一步证明了肝靶向 ACC 抑制治疗 NAFLD 和肝胰岛素抵抗的治疗效用。