Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The longitudinal distribution of different brush border enzymes along the human small intestine was studied by crossed immunoelectrophoresis. The results are based on biopsies taken every 50 cm in three intestines obtained at autopsy and on peroral or peroperative biopsies from the ligament of Treitz, proximal jejunum and distal ileum from 11 patients undergoing jejunoileal bypass operation for
obesity
. Lactase-phlorizin hydrolase (EC 3.2.1.23-62) and sucrase-isomaltase(EC 3.2.1.48-10) had their highest level in jejunum with decreasing activity towards the proximal and distal ends of the intestine, while maltase (EC 3.2.1.20) increased along the intestine and reached its highest activity in the distal ileum. A carboxypeptidase (EC 3.4.12.X) is demonstrated as an enzymatic entity of the human intestine. This enzyme had a rather flat distribution curve while microvillus aminopeptidase (EC 3.4.11.2),
dipeptidyl peptidase IV
(EC 3.4.14.X) and aspartate aminopeptidase (EC 3.4.11.7) all increased along the length axis and reached maximum values in distal ileum.
...
PMID:Immunoelectrophoretic studies on human small intestinal brush border proteins--the longitudinal distribution of peptidases and disaccharidases. 611 68
Neuropeptide Y (NPY(1-36)), a sympathetic cotransmitter and neurohormone, has pleiotropic activities ranging from the control of
obesity
to anxiolysis and cardiovascular function. Its actions are mediated by multiple Gi/o-coupled receptors (Y1-Y5) and modulated by
dipeptidyl peptidase IV
(DPPIV/cd26), which inactivates NPY's Y1-agonistic activity but generates the Y2 and Y5-agonist, NPY(3-36). Released by sympathetic activity, NPY is a major mediator of stress, responsible for prolonged vasoconstriction via Y1 receptors. Y1 receptors also mediate NPY's potent vascular growth-promoting activity leading in vivo in rodents to neointima formation. This and the association of a polymorphism of the NPY signal peptide with increased lipidemia and carotid artery thickening in humans strongly suggest NPY's role in atherosclerosis. NPY and DPPIV/cd26 are also coexpressed in the endothelium, where the peptide activates angiogenesis. A similar system exists in immune cells, where NPY and DPPIV/cd26 are coactivated and involved in the modulation of cytokine release and immune cell functions. Thus, NPY, both a messenger and a modulator for all three systems, is poised to play an important regulatory role facilitating interactions among sympathetic, vascular and immune systems in diverse pathophysiological conditions such as hypertension, atherosclerosis and stress-related alterations of immunity.
...
PMID:Neuropeptide Y: a new mediator linking sympathetic nerves, blood vessels and immune system? 1271 May 20
In Type 2 diabetes, glucose homeostasis is impaired due to either a decrease in insulin secretion or insulin action. In this symposium, molecular targets that could have an impact on either or both of these defects were discussed and data related to specific compounds were presented. Protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B inhibitors that relieve the negative control on insulin action and are active in cell assays,
dipeptidyl peptidase IV
inhibitors that raise postprandial glucagon-like peptide 1 levels in animals and humans, and pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase inhibitors that increase the levels of pyruvate dehydrogenase, which in turn improve insulin sensitivity, were all discussed. Roche presented for the first time their novel glucokinase activators and discussed both the in vitro and in vivo activity profiles of representative glucokinase activators as potential therapy for Type 2 diabetes. Second generation retinoid X receptor modulators that retain the desirable effects of full agonists, while devoid of their negative attributes, such as triglyceride accumulation, were discussed. Also, clinical efficacy results of synthetic exendin-4, Exenatide trade mark, a glucagon-like peptide 1 analogue, were presented. In the area of
obesity
, agonists of several central (melanocortin type 4, serotonin subtype 2C and cannabinoid receptor 1) receptors and one peripheral G-protein-coupled receptor, cholecystokinin receptor-A, all of which lead to reduced food intake in animals, were discussed.
...
PMID:Metabolic diseases drug discovery world summit. July 28-29, 2003, San Diego, CA, USA. 1451 91
An incretin hormone, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), has been shown to lower plasma glucose via glucose-dependent insulin secretion and to reduce appetite. We previously found that the biguanide metformin, an antidiabetic agent, causes a significant increase of plasma active GLP-1 level in the presence of
dipeptidyl peptidase IV
(
DPPIV
) inhibitor in normal rats. This finding suggested that the combination treatment might produce a greater antidiabetic and anorectic effect, based on enhanced GLP-1 action. In this study, we assessed the effects of subchronic treatment with metformin and a
DPPIV
inhibitor, valine-pyrrolidide (val-pyr), on glycemic control, food intake, and weight gain using Zucker fa/fa rats, a model of
obesity
and impaired glucose tolerance. The combination treatment caused a significant increase of GLP-1 level in Zucker fa/fa rats. In a subchronic study, val-pyr, metformin, or both compounds were administered orally b.i.d. for 14 days. The combination treatment significantly decreased food intake and body weight gain, although neither metformin nor val-pyr treatment alone had any effect. In an oral glucose tolerance test on day 1, the coadministration caused a greater improvement of glucose tolerance and a prominent increase of plasma active GLP-1 without marked insulin secretion. The 14-day combination treatment produced a potent reduction of fasting blood glucose and plasma insulin levels. These results demonstrate that the combination therapy of metformin with
DPPIV
inhibitor leads to reduced food intake and body weight gain, most likely through the significant increase of plasma GLP-1 level. The combination therapy seems to be a good candidate for treatment of type 2 diabetes with
obesity
.
...
PMID:Metformin causes reduction of food intake and body weight gain and improvement of glucose intolerance in combination with dipeptidyl peptidase IV inhibitor in Zucker fa/fa rats. 1503 52
Public health efforts and current antiobesity agents have not controlled the increasing epidemic of
obesity
. Investigational antiobesity agents consist of 1) central nervous system agents that affect neurotransmitters or neural ion channels, including antidepressants (bupropion), selective serotonin 2c receptor agonists, antiseizure agents (topiramate, zonisamide), some dopamine antagonists, and cannabinoid-1 receptor antagonists (rimonabant); 2) leptin/insulin/central nervous system pathway agents, including leptin analogues, leptin transport and/or leptin receptor promoters, ciliary neurotrophic factor (Axokine), neuropeptide Y and agouti-related peptide antagonists, proopiomelanocortin and cocaine and amphetamine regulated transcript promoters, alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone analogues, melanocortin-4 receptor agonists, and agents that affect insulin metabolism/activity, which include protein-tyrosine phosphatase-1B inhibitors, peroxisome proliferator activated receptor-gamma receptor antagonists, short-acting bromocriptine (ergoset), somatostatin agonists (octreotide), and adiponectin; 3) gastrointestinal-neural pathway agents, including those that increase cholecystokinin activity, increase glucagon-like peptide-1 activity (extendin 4, liraglutide,
dipeptidyl peptidase IV
inhibitors), and increase protein YY3-36 activity and those that decrease ghrelin activity, as well as amylin analogues (pramlintide); 4) agents that may increase resting metabolic rate ("selective" beta-3 stimulators/agonist, uncoupling protein homologues, and thyroid receptor agonists); and 5) other more diverse agents, including melanin concentrating hormone antagonists, phytostanol analogues, functional oils, P57, amylase inhibitors, growth hormone fragments, synthetic analogues of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, antagonists of adipocyte 11B-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 activity, corticotropin-releasing hormone agonists, inhibitors of fatty acid synthesis, carboxypeptidase inhibitors, indanones/indanols, aminosterols, and other gastrointestinal lipase inhibitors (ATL962). Finally, an emerging concept is that the development of antiobesity agents must not only reduce fat mass (adiposity) but must also correct fat dysfunction (adiposopathy).
...
PMID:Current and investigational antiobesity agents and obesity therapeutic treatment targets. 1534 Jan
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) is produced both in the human and rat intestine and brain. The release of GLP-1 into the blood is mediated by factors of neural and hormonal origin and is stimulated by the presence of nutrients in the digestive tract, while the enzyme
dipeptidyl peptidase IV
and the kidneys are responsible for, respectively, the rapid degradation and excretion of the hormone. Peripherally secreted GLP-1 enhances insulin synthesis and release and maintains the normal anatomical status of pancreatic islets. Diminished GLP-1 response to ingested food, associated with attenuated insulin release and glucose intolerance, was found in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. GLP-1 replacement in diabetic subjects normalized these parameters, thus indicating a role for this peptide in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes. GLP-1 might also be involved in the pathophysiology of
obesity
and stress to some extent. Both peripheral and central GLP-1 are probably involved in the control of feeding centers as an anorexic agent. GLP-1 affects the activity of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis both under basal and stress conditions, including taste aversion learning. Hence, GLP-1-dependent pathophysiological mechanisms may participate in the pathogenesis of the most common metabolic and behavioral disorders.
...
PMID:Physiology and pathophysiology of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1): the role of GLP-1 in the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus, obesity, and stress. 1604 95
Peptide YY (PYY) is secreted as a 36 amino acid, straight chain polypeptide, and is found in greatest concentrations in the terminal ileum, colon and rectum. After secretion,
dipeptidyl peptidase IV
(DPP-IV) cleaves the N-terminal Tyrosine-Proline residues from PYY(1-36), producing PYY(3-36). PYY(1-36) acts at all four human Y receptors, Y1, Y2, Y4 and Y5, while PYY(336) is a specific Y2 receptor agonist. PYY participates in the regulation of appetite and weight balance through hypothalamic-based mechanisms. PYY(1-36) stimulates appetite and weight gain through Y1 and Y5 receptors. PYY(3-36) suppresses appetite and stimulates weight loss through Y2 receptors. GI diseases that cause malabsorption increase both basal and meal-stimulated PYY levels. In contrast,
obesity
decreases both basal and meal-stimulated PYY levels. Mutations in the human PYY and Y2 receptor genes may contribute to the development of
obesity
. Small bowel resection elevates PYY levels in humans. Colon resections increase PYY levels in animal models but not in man. PYY changes following bariatric operations are incompletely studied. Vertical banded gastroplasty, open Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and jejunoileal bypass significantly elevate basal and meal-stimulated PYY levels. In dogs with Pavlov pouches, Roux-en-Y duodenojejunostomy (duodenal switch) increases PYY levels compared to Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy. DPP-IV activity is increased in obese individuals and remains increased after biliopancreatic diversion. Thus, diseases or operations which cause malabsorption, elevate basal and meal-stimulated PYY levels. Bariatric operations also increase basal and meal-stimulated PYY levels. This suggests that the combination of increased PYY levels and elevated levels of DPP-IV observed after bariatric operations may generate increased circulating levels of PYY(3-36), leading to hypothalamic-mediated suppression of appetite and promotion of weight loss through Y2 receptor mediated mechanisms.
...
PMID:Peptide YY(1-36) and peptide YY(3-36): Part II. Changes after gastrointestinal surgery and bariatric surgery. 1675 46
A series of (5-substituted pyrrolidinyl-2-carbonyl)-2-cyanopyrrolidine (C5-Pro-Pro) analogues was discovered as
dipeptidyl peptidase IV
(
DPPIV
) inhibitors as a potential treatment of diabetes and
obesity
. X-ray crystallography data show that these inhibitors bind to the catalytic site of
DPPIV
with the cyano group forming a covalent bond with the serine residue of
DPPIV
. The C5-substituents make various interactions with the enzyme and affect potency, chemical stability, selectivity, and PK properties of the inhibitors. Optimized analogues are extremely potent with subnanomolar K(i)'s, are chemically stable, show very little potency decrease in the presence of plasma, and exhibit more than 1,000-fold selectivity against related peptidases. The best compounds also possess good PK and are efficacious in lowering blood glucose in an oral glucose tolerance test in ZDF rats.
...
PMID:Discovery, structure-activity relationship, and pharmacological evaluation of (5-substituted-pyrrolidinyl-2-carbonyl)-2-cyanopyrrolidines as potent dipeptidyl peptidase IV inhibitors. 1675 95
Peptidic mimics of the gut hormone glucagon-like peptide (GLP) 1, exemplified by the recently approved drug exenatide, show promise as therapies for type 2 diabetes. Such "incretin mimetics" regulate glucose appearance in the plasma and can restore glucose-stimulated insulin secretion without excess risk of hypoglycemia. The need for injection, which may limit the use of peptidic GLP-1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonists, has driven largely unsuccessful efforts to find smaller molecules. The failure to identify orally effective agonists has instead promoted the indirect approach of inhibiting the GLP-1-degrading enzyme
dipeptidyl peptidase IV
. Here we report a nonpeptidic GLP-1R agonist with sufficient activity to evoke effects in whole animals, including antidiabetic efficacy in db/db mice. Two substituted cyclobutanes (S4P and Boc5) were developed after screening a compound library against a cell line stably cotransfected with GLP-1R and a cAMP-responsive reporter. Each bound to GLP-1R and increased intracellular cAMP. Agonist effects were blocked by the GLP-1R antagonist exendin(9-39). Boc5 amplified glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in isolated rat islets. Both i.p. and oral administration of Boc5 dose-dependently inhibited food intake in mice, an effect that could be blocked by pretreatment with exendin(9-39). Daily injections of Boc5 into db/db mice reduced HbA1c to nondiabetic values, an effect not observed in ad libitum-fed or pair-fed diabetic controls. Thus, Boc5 behaved as a full GLP-1 mimetic in vitro and in vivo. The chemical genus represented by Boc5 may prompt the exploration of orally available GLP-1R agonists with potential utility in diabetes and
obesity
.
...
PMID:A nonpeptidic agonist of glucagon-like peptide 1 receptors with efficacy in diabetic db/db mice. 1721 6
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) has long been known to be involved in stress, centrally as an anxiolytic neuromodulator, and peripherally as a sympathetic nerve- and in some species, platelet-derived vasoconstrictor. The peptide is also a vascular mitogen, via Y1/Y5, and is angiogenic via Y2/Y5 receptors. Arterial injury activates platelet NPY and vascular Y1 receptors, inducing medial hypertrophy and neointima formation. Exogenous NPY,
dipeptidyl peptidase IV
(DPPIV, forming an Y2/Y5-selective agonist) and chronic stress augment these effects and occlude vessels with atherosclerotic-like lesions, containing thrombus and lipid-laden macrophages. Y1 antagonist blocks stress-induced vasoconstriction and post-angioplasty occlusions, and hence may be therapeutic in angina and atherosclerosis/restenosis. Conversely, tissue ischemia activates neuronal and platelet-derived NPY, Y2/Y5 and DPPIV, which stimulate angiogenesis/arteriogenesis. NPY-Y2-DPPIV agonists may be beneficial for ischemic revascularization and wound healing, whereas antagonists may be therapeutic in retinopathy, tumors, and
obesity
. Since stress is an underestimated risk factor in many of these conditions, NPY-based drugs may offer new treatment possibilities.
...
PMID:Stress, NPY and vascular remodeling: Implications for stress-related diseases. 1724 99
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