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Jan 15

Scientists block AHR receptors to treat obesity in mice – Drug Target Review

A team of scientists in the United States has successfully used a drug, which blocks AHR receptors, to prevent and treat obesity in mice. Their findings have spurred further research into the receptors association with diet and the gut microbiome.

As a known contributor to several cancers, including breast, colon and pancreatic, the ability to halt the obesity epidemic could prove crucial in preventing these diseases. Working to this goal, researchers in the laboratory of Craig Tomlinson PhDat Dartmouths and Dartmouth-Hitchcocks Norris Cotton Cancer Center have identified a critical target. The team discovered that a receptor found in almost all cells, called the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR), which is known primarily to combat exposures to environmental chemicals, also plays a key role in the bodys metabolism. In the course of their research the team found that blocking AHR not only prevented, but reversed obesity in laboratory mice.

We carried out experiments showing that when a drug named NF and known to block the AHR was added to a high-fat diet, mice did not become any fatter than mice on a low-fat control diet, says Tomlinson. Mice on the high-fat diet with no NF became very obese within the same time span. No ill effects were observed from the drug.

With this insight, the researchers then assessed whether blocking the AHR with NF could not only prevent obesity but reverse it. In these experiments, we allowed the mice to become obese on a high-fat diet, and then half the mice were switched to the high-fat diet containing the AHR blocker NF. Over the next few weeks, the mice switched to the high-fat diet containing NF dropped to the same body weight as those mice on the low-fat diet. The remaining mice on the high-fat diet became obese. Again, no ill effects were observed, explains Tomlinson.

Finally, Tomlinsons team investigated the mechanisms behind how the AHR, when blocked by NF, prevented and reversed obesity. Using previous knowledge that the AHR regulates key genes in fat metabolism, the team discovered that in liver cells and in fat cells, the AHR, when blocked by NF, fails to induce several key genes required for fat storage and synthesis. They concluded that the prevention and reversal of obesity from blocking the activity of the AHR is due to key genes regulated by the AHR that are involved in fat metabolism. Few to no studies have shown that obesity can be reversed by a drug treatment; it is even rarer to know the underlying cellular mechanism, notes Tomlinson.

Tomlinsons team has begun investigating several key questions surrounding what factors influence AHR activity. These include assessing the dietary compounds in the food we eat and their ability to activate AHR to cause obesity, and investigating the role that gut bacteria play in AHR and obesity. Most importantly, they have initiated a clinical trial to determine whether the AHR may serve as a therapeutic target to reduce obesity in humans. We are beginning to understand how the blockage of the AHR prevents and reverses obesity, which may lead to a therapeutic treatment of obesity in humans, says Tomlinson.

The teams findings, Reversal of obesity and liver steatosis in mice via inhibition of aryl hydrocarbon receptor and altered gene expression of CYP1B1, PPAR, SCD1, and osteopontin, have been published in theInternational Journal of Obesity.

Read more:
Scientists block AHR receptors to treat obesity in mice - Drug Target Review

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