4.7 Article

Ponatinib modulates the metabolic profile of obese mice by inhibiting adipose tissue macrophage inflammation

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.1040999

Keywords

ponatinib; adipose tissue macrophages; obesity; metabolic dysfunction; tyrosine kinase inhibitors

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [2021YFA0805100]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong [81930106, U21A20342, 82003744, 82170545, 81903598, 82073839, 91739104, 82204384]
  4. GuangDong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation [2019A1515011295]
  5. High-level Health Team Foundation of Zhuhai (2018) [2019A1515110872]
  6. High Talents Scientific Research Foundation of Zhongshan School Medicine

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This study reveals that ponatinib can significantly improve obesity-related metabolic syndrome, especially insulin sensitivity and hyperlipidemia. Ponatinib achieves its beneficial effects by inhibiting the inflammatory transformation of adipose tissue macrophages, thus maintaining the physiological function of adipose tissue under excessive obesity.
Obesity-induced metabolic syndrome is a rapidly growing conundrum, reaching epidemic proportions globally. Chronic inflammation in obese adipose tissue plays a key role in metabolic syndrome with a series of local and systemic effects such as inflammatory cell infiltration and inflammatory cytokine secretion. Adipose tissue macrophages (ATM), as one of the main regulators in this process, are particularly crucial for pharmacological studies on obesity-related metabolic syndrome. Ponatinib, a multi-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor originally used to treat leukemia, has recently been found to improve dyslipidemia and atherosclerosis, suggesting that it may have profound effect on metabolic syndrome, although the mechanisms underlying have not yet been revealed. Here we discovered that ponatinib significantly improved insulin sensitivity in leptin deficient obese mice. In addition to that, ponatinib treatment remarkably ameliorated high fat diet-induced hyperlipidemia and inhibited ectopic lipid deposition in the liver. Interestingly, although ponatinib did not reduce but increase the weight of white adipose tissue (WAT), it remarkably suppressed the inflammatory response in WAT and preserved its function. Mechanistically, we showed that ponatinib had no direct effect on hepatocyte or adipocyte but attenuated free fatty acid (FFA) induced macrophage transformation from pro-inflammatory to anti-inflammatory phenotype. Moreover, adipocytes co-cultured with FFA-treated macrophages exhibited insulin resistance, while pre-treat these macrophages with ponatinib can ameliorate this process. These results suggested that the beneficial effects of ponatinib on metabolic disorders are achieved by inhibiting the inflammatory phenotypic transformation of ATMs, thereby maintaining the physiological function of adipose tissue under excessive obesity. The data here not only revealed the novel therapeutic function of ponatinib, but also provided a theoretical basis for the application of multi-target tyrosine kinase inhibitors in metabolic diseases.

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