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Rat Urinary Bladder Carcinogenesis by Dual-Acting PPARα + γ Agonists

Despite clinical promise, dual-acting activators of PPARα and γ (here termed PPARα+γ agonists) have experienced high attrition rates in preclinical and early clinical development, due to toxicity. In some cases, discontinuation was due to carcinogenic effect in the rat urothelium, the epithelial lay...

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Autores principales: Oleksiewicz, Martin B., Southgate, Jennifer, Iversen, Lars, Egerod, Frederikke L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2632771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19197366
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2008/103167
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author Oleksiewicz, Martin B.
Southgate, Jennifer
Iversen, Lars
Egerod, Frederikke L.
author_facet Oleksiewicz, Martin B.
Southgate, Jennifer
Iversen, Lars
Egerod, Frederikke L.
author_sort Oleksiewicz, Martin B.
collection PubMed
description Despite clinical promise, dual-acting activators of PPARα and γ (here termed PPARα+γ agonists) have experienced high attrition rates in preclinical and early clinical development, due to toxicity. In some cases, discontinuation was due to carcinogenic effect in the rat urothelium, the epithelial layer lining the urinary bladder, ureters, and kidney pelvis. Chronic pharmacological activation of PPARα is invariably associated with cancer in rats and mice. Chronic pharmacological activation of PPARγ can in some cases also cause cancer in rats and mice. Urothelial cells coexpress PPARα as well as PPARγ, making it plausible that the urothelial carcinogenicity of PPARα+γ agonists may be caused by receptor-mediated effects (exaggerated pharmacology). Based on previously published mode of action data for the PPARα+γ agonist ragaglitazar, and the available literature about the role of PPARα and γ in rodent carcinogenesis, we propose a mode of action hypothesis for the carcinogenic effect of PPARα+γ agonists in the rat urothelium, which combines receptor-mediated and off-target cytotoxic effects. The proposed mode of action hypothesis is being explored in our laboratories, towards understanding the human relevance of the rat cancer findings, and developing rapid in vitro or short-term in vivo screening approaches to faciliate development of new dual-acting PPAR agonist compounds.
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spelling pubmed-26327712009-02-05 Rat Urinary Bladder Carcinogenesis by Dual-Acting PPARα + γ Agonists Oleksiewicz, Martin B. Southgate, Jennifer Iversen, Lars Egerod, Frederikke L. PPAR Res Review Article Despite clinical promise, dual-acting activators of PPARα and γ (here termed PPARα+γ agonists) have experienced high attrition rates in preclinical and early clinical development, due to toxicity. In some cases, discontinuation was due to carcinogenic effect in the rat urothelium, the epithelial layer lining the urinary bladder, ureters, and kidney pelvis. Chronic pharmacological activation of PPARα is invariably associated with cancer in rats and mice. Chronic pharmacological activation of PPARγ can in some cases also cause cancer in rats and mice. Urothelial cells coexpress PPARα as well as PPARγ, making it plausible that the urothelial carcinogenicity of PPARα+γ agonists may be caused by receptor-mediated effects (exaggerated pharmacology). Based on previously published mode of action data for the PPARα+γ agonist ragaglitazar, and the available literature about the role of PPARα and γ in rodent carcinogenesis, we propose a mode of action hypothesis for the carcinogenic effect of PPARα+γ agonists in the rat urothelium, which combines receptor-mediated and off-target cytotoxic effects. The proposed mode of action hypothesis is being explored in our laboratories, towards understanding the human relevance of the rat cancer findings, and developing rapid in vitro or short-term in vivo screening approaches to faciliate development of new dual-acting PPAR agonist compounds. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2008 2009-01-28 /pmc/articles/PMC2632771/ /pubmed/19197366 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2008/103167 Text en Copyright © 2008 Martin B. Oleksiewicz et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Oleksiewicz, Martin B.
Southgate, Jennifer
Iversen, Lars
Egerod, Frederikke L.
Rat Urinary Bladder Carcinogenesis by Dual-Acting PPARα + γ Agonists
title Rat Urinary Bladder Carcinogenesis by Dual-Acting PPARα + γ Agonists
title_full Rat Urinary Bladder Carcinogenesis by Dual-Acting PPARα + γ Agonists
title_fullStr Rat Urinary Bladder Carcinogenesis by Dual-Acting PPARα + γ Agonists
title_full_unstemmed Rat Urinary Bladder Carcinogenesis by Dual-Acting PPARα + γ Agonists
title_short Rat Urinary Bladder Carcinogenesis by Dual-Acting PPARα + γ Agonists
title_sort rat urinary bladder carcinogenesis by dual-acting pparα + γ agonists
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2632771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19197366
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2008/103167
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