Article date: June 2016
By: José K Heuvel, Mariëtte R Boon, Ingmar Hengel, Emma Peschier‐van der Put, Lianne Beek, Vanessa Harmelen, Ko Willems Dijk, Alberto M Pereira, Hazel Hunt, Joseph K Belanoff, Patrick C N Rensen, Onno C Meijer in Volume 173, Issue 11, pages 1793-1804
Background and Purpose
High‐fat diet consumption results in obesity and chronic low‐grade inflammation in adipose tissue. Whereas glucocorticoid receptor (GR) antagonism reduces diet‐induced obesity, GR agonism reduces inflammation, the combination of which would be desired in a strategy to combat the metabolic syndrome. The purpose of this study was to assess the beneficial effects of the selective GR modulator C108297 on both diet‐induced weight gain and inflammation in mice and to elucidate underlying mechanisms.
Experimental Approach
Ten‐week‐old C57Bl/6 J mice were fed a high‐fat diet for 4 weeks while being treated with the selective GR modulator C108297, a full GR antagonist (RU486/mifepristone) or vehicle.
Key Results
C108297 and, to a lesser extent, mifepristone reduced body weight gain and fat mass. C108297 decreased food and fructose intake and increased lipolysis in white adipose tissue (WAT) and free fatty acid levels in plasma, resulting in decreased fat cell size and increased fatty acid oxidation. Furthermore, C108297 reduced macrophage infiltration and pro‐inflammatory cytokine expression in WAT, as well as in vitro LPS‐stimulated TNF‐α secretion in macrophage RAW 264.7 cells. However, mifepristone also increased energy expenditure, as measured by fully automatic metabolic cages, and enhanced expression of thermogenic markers in energy‐combusting brown adipose tissue (BAT) but did not affect inflammation.
Conclusions and Implications
C108297 attenuates obesity by reducing caloric intake and increasing lipolysis and fat oxidation, and in addition attenuates inflammation. These data suggest that selective GR modulation may be a viable strategy for the reduction of diet‐induced obesity and inflammation.
DOI: 10.1111/bph.13477
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