A drug discovery method had found a naturally occurring metabolite that changes ‘bad’ fat into ‘good’ fat that could lead to treatments for metabolic disorders
‘Metabolism’ describes the body’s chemical changes that create the necessary materials for growth and overall health.
Metabolites are the substances made and used during these metabolic processes or, as a new discovery out of Scripps Research and its drug development arm, Calibr, indicates, they could also be potent molecules for treating severe diseases.
The researchers used novel drug discovery technologies to uncover a metabolite that converts white fat cells (‘bad’ fat) to brown fat (‘good’ fat) cells.
This discovery offers a potential way of addressing metabolic conditions like obesity, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Even more, it speaks to the promise of using this creative drug discovery method to identify countless other potential therapeutics.
Gary Siuzdak, PhD, is co-lead author and the senior director of the Scripps Center for Metabolomics and professor of Chemistry, Molecular and Computational Biology at Scripps Research. He said: “The reason many types of molecules don’t go to market is because of toxicity.
“With our technology, we can pull out endogenous metabolites – meaning the ones that the body makes on its own – that can have the same impact as a drug with less side effects.
“The potential of this approach is even evidenced by the FDA’s recent approval of Relyvrio, the combination of two endogenous metabolites for the treatment of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).”
See also: Diet cravings for fatty foods traced to brain-gut interface
white fat to brown fat
Metabolic diseases are often caused by an imbalance in energy homeostasis – in other words, when the body takes in more energy than it expends. This is why certain therapeutic approaches have centred around converting white fat cells (known as adipocytes) into brown fat cells.
White adipocytes store excess energy and can eventually result in metabolic diseases like obesity, while brown adipocytes dissolve this stored energy into heat – ultimately increasing the body’s energy expenditure and helping bring it back into balance.
To uncover a therapy that could stimulate the production of brown adipocytes, the researchers searched through Calibr’s ReFRAME drug-repurposing collection; a library of 14,000 known drug compounds that have been approved by the FDA for other diseases or have been extensively tested for human safety.
Using high-throughput screening – an automated drug discovery method for searching through large pools of information – the scientists scanned ReFRAME for a drug with these specific capabilities.
This is how they uncovered zafirlukast, an FDA-approved drug used for treating asthma.
Through a set of cell culture experiments, they found zafirlukast could turn adipocyte precursor cells (known as preadipocytes) into predominantly brown adipocytes, as well as convert white adipocytes into brown adipocytes.
While an encouraging find, zafirlukast is toxic when administered at higher doses, and it wasn’t entirely clear how zafirlukast was converting the fat cells. This is when the researchers partnered with Siuzdak and his team of metabolite experts.
Kristen Johnson, PhD, co-lead author of the paper and a director in Translational Drug Discovery Research at Calibr, said: “We needed to use additional tools to break down the chemicals in zafirlukast’s mechanism.
“Framed another way, could we find a metabolite that was providing the same functional effect that zafirlukast was, but without the side effects?”
special characteristic
Siuzdak and his team designed a novel set of experiments, known as drug-initiated activity metabolomics (DIAM) screening, to help answer Johnson’s question.
DIAM uses technologies such as liquid chromatography (a tool that separates components in a mixture) and mass spectrometry (an analytical technique that separates particles by weight and charge) to pool through thousands of molecules and identify specific metabolites.
In this case, the researchers were searching through adipose tissue for metabolites that could lead to brown adipocyte cell production.
After reducing 30,000 metabolic features to just 17 metabolites, they found myristoylglycine – an endogenous metabolite that prompted the creation of brown adipocytes, without harming the cell.
Of the thousands of metabolic features measured in the analysis, only myristoylglycine had this special characteristic, even among nearly structurally identical metabolites.
Johnson explained: “Identifying myristoylglycine among the thousands of other molecules speaks to the power of Siuzdak’s approach and these technologies.
“Our findings illustrate what happens when an analytical chemistry team and a drug discovery group closely collaborate with each other.”
The study is published in Metabolites.
Image: Zafirlukast induces the production of brown adipocyte tissue. For preadipocytes treated with zafirlukast (right image), brown adipocytes (shown in red) were much more prevalent than preadipocytes grown with the DMSO control (left image). © Scripps Research and Calibr.