Cargando…

A high throughput live transparent animal bioassay to identify non-toxic small molecules or genes that regulate vertebrate fat metabolism for obesity drug development

BACKGROUND: The alarming rise in the obesity epidemic and growing concern for the pathologic consequences of the metabolic syndrome warrant great need for development of obesity-related pharmacotherapeutics. The search for such therapeutics is severely limited by the slow throughput of animal models...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jones, Kevin S, Alimov, Alexander P, Rilo, Horacio L, Jandacek, Ronald J, Woollett, Laura A, Penberthy, W Todd
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2531115/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18752667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-7075-5-23
_version_ 1782158969498763264
author Jones, Kevin S
Alimov, Alexander P
Rilo, Horacio L
Jandacek, Ronald J
Woollett, Laura A
Penberthy, W Todd
author_facet Jones, Kevin S
Alimov, Alexander P
Rilo, Horacio L
Jandacek, Ronald J
Woollett, Laura A
Penberthy, W Todd
author_sort Jones, Kevin S
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The alarming rise in the obesity epidemic and growing concern for the pathologic consequences of the metabolic syndrome warrant great need for development of obesity-related pharmacotherapeutics. The search for such therapeutics is severely limited by the slow throughput of animal models of obesity. Amenable to placement into a 96 well plate, zebrafish larvae have emerged as one of the highest throughput vertebrate model organisms for performing small molecule screens. A method for visually identifying non-toxic molecular effectors of fat metabolism using a live transparent vertebrate was developed. Given that increased levels of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) via deletion of CD38 have been shown to prevent high fat diet induced obesity in mice in a SIRT-1 dependent fashion we explored the possibility of directly applying NAD to zebrafish. METHODS: Zebrafish larvae were incubated with daily refreshing of nile red containing media starting from a developmental stage of equivalent fat content among siblings (3 days post-fertilization, dpf) and continuing with daily refreshing until 7 dpf. RESULTS: PPAR activators, beta-adrenergic agonists, SIRT-1 activators, and nicotinic acid treatment all caused predicted changes in fat, cholesterol, and gene expression consistent with a high degree of evolutionary conservation of fat metabolism signal transduction extending from man to zebrafish larvae. All changes in fat content were visually quantifiable in a relative fashion using live zebrafish larvae nile red fluorescence microscopy. Resveratrol treatment caused the greatest and most consistent loss of fat content. The resveratrol tetramer Vaticanol B caused loss of fat equivalent in potency to resveratrol alone. Significantly, the direct administration of NAD decreased fat content in zebrafish. Results from knockdown of a zebrafish G-PCR ortholog previously determined to decrease fat content in C. elegans support that future GPR142 antagonists may be effective non-toxic anti-obesity therapeutics. CONCLUSION: Owing to the apparently high level of evolutionary conservation of signal transduction pathways regulating lipid metabolism, the zebrafish can be useful for identifying non-toxic small molecules or pharmacological target gene products for developing molecular therapeutics for treating clinical obesity. Our results support the promising potential in applying NAD or resveratrol where the underlying target protein likely involves Sirtuin family member proteins. Furthermore data supports future studies focused on determining whether there is a high concentration window for resveratrol that is effective and non-toxic in high fat obesity murine models.
format Text
id pubmed-2531115
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25311152008-09-06 A high throughput live transparent animal bioassay to identify non-toxic small molecules or genes that regulate vertebrate fat metabolism for obesity drug development Jones, Kevin S Alimov, Alexander P Rilo, Horacio L Jandacek, Ronald J Woollett, Laura A Penberthy, W Todd Nutr Metab (Lond) Research BACKGROUND: The alarming rise in the obesity epidemic and growing concern for the pathologic consequences of the metabolic syndrome warrant great need for development of obesity-related pharmacotherapeutics. The search for such therapeutics is severely limited by the slow throughput of animal models of obesity. Amenable to placement into a 96 well plate, zebrafish larvae have emerged as one of the highest throughput vertebrate model organisms for performing small molecule screens. A method for visually identifying non-toxic molecular effectors of fat metabolism using a live transparent vertebrate was developed. Given that increased levels of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) via deletion of CD38 have been shown to prevent high fat diet induced obesity in mice in a SIRT-1 dependent fashion we explored the possibility of directly applying NAD to zebrafish. METHODS: Zebrafish larvae were incubated with daily refreshing of nile red containing media starting from a developmental stage of equivalent fat content among siblings (3 days post-fertilization, dpf) and continuing with daily refreshing until 7 dpf. RESULTS: PPAR activators, beta-adrenergic agonists, SIRT-1 activators, and nicotinic acid treatment all caused predicted changes in fat, cholesterol, and gene expression consistent with a high degree of evolutionary conservation of fat metabolism signal transduction extending from man to zebrafish larvae. All changes in fat content were visually quantifiable in a relative fashion using live zebrafish larvae nile red fluorescence microscopy. Resveratrol treatment caused the greatest and most consistent loss of fat content. The resveratrol tetramer Vaticanol B caused loss of fat equivalent in potency to resveratrol alone. Significantly, the direct administration of NAD decreased fat content in zebrafish. Results from knockdown of a zebrafish G-PCR ortholog previously determined to decrease fat content in C. elegans support that future GPR142 antagonists may be effective non-toxic anti-obesity therapeutics. CONCLUSION: Owing to the apparently high level of evolutionary conservation of signal transduction pathways regulating lipid metabolism, the zebrafish can be useful for identifying non-toxic small molecules or pharmacological target gene products for developing molecular therapeutics for treating clinical obesity. Our results support the promising potential in applying NAD or resveratrol where the underlying target protein likely involves Sirtuin family member proteins. Furthermore data supports future studies focused on determining whether there is a high concentration window for resveratrol that is effective and non-toxic in high fat obesity murine models. BioMed Central 2008-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC2531115/ /pubmed/18752667 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-7075-5-23 Text en Copyright © 2008 Jones et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Jones, Kevin S
Alimov, Alexander P
Rilo, Horacio L
Jandacek, Ronald J
Woollett, Laura A
Penberthy, W Todd
A high throughput live transparent animal bioassay to identify non-toxic small molecules or genes that regulate vertebrate fat metabolism for obesity drug development
title A high throughput live transparent animal bioassay to identify non-toxic small molecules or genes that regulate vertebrate fat metabolism for obesity drug development
title_full A high throughput live transparent animal bioassay to identify non-toxic small molecules or genes that regulate vertebrate fat metabolism for obesity drug development
title_fullStr A high throughput live transparent animal bioassay to identify non-toxic small molecules or genes that regulate vertebrate fat metabolism for obesity drug development
title_full_unstemmed A high throughput live transparent animal bioassay to identify non-toxic small molecules or genes that regulate vertebrate fat metabolism for obesity drug development
title_short A high throughput live transparent animal bioassay to identify non-toxic small molecules or genes that regulate vertebrate fat metabolism for obesity drug development
title_sort high throughput live transparent animal bioassay to identify non-toxic small molecules or genes that regulate vertebrate fat metabolism for obesity drug development
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2531115/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18752667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-7075-5-23
work_keys_str_mv AT joneskevins ahighthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment
AT alimovalexanderp ahighthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment
AT rilohoraciol ahighthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment
AT jandacekronaldj ahighthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment
AT woollettlauraa ahighthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment
AT penberthywtodd ahighthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment
AT joneskevins highthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment
AT alimovalexanderp highthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment
AT rilohoraciol highthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment
AT jandacekronaldj highthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment
AT woollettlauraa highthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment
AT penberthywtodd highthroughputlivetransparentanimalbioassaytoidentifynontoxicsmallmoleculesorgenesthatregulatevertebratefatmetabolismforobesitydrugdevelopment