Scientific News Health care Cardiovascular diseases NATURAL COMPOUND USED IN INDIA REDUCES CHOLESTEROL BY BLOCKING METABOLISM-CONTROLLING RECEPTOR
NATURAL COMPOUND USED IN INDIA REDUCES
CHOLESTEROL BY BLOCKING METABOLISM-CONTROLLING RECEPTOR
UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas
researchers have helped prove that a naturally occurring compound used for
centuries as a dietary supplement in India can help lower cholesterol levels.
The research, published in today’s issue of
Science and done in collaboration with Baylor College of Medicine in Houston,
shows that guggulsterone blocks the FXR receptor, which regulates cholesterol
metabolism.
Dr. David Mangelsdorf, professor of pharmacology
and an investigator in the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) at UT
Southwestern, and his colleagues previously had revealed FXR’s role in the
body’s conversion of cholesterol to bile acids. When the bile acids reach a
certain level in the body, FXR is activated to interrupt the
cholesterol-to-bile-acid process.
“The receptor keeps bile acids in check,”
Mangelsdorf said. “If you disturb it, it changes how cholesterol is
metabolized.”
Researchers at Baylor discovered that
guggulsterone – made from the sap of Commiphora mukul, a tree commonly known
in India as guggul – blocked FXR activity in a gene assay. Assays are flat
panels used to study genetic activity outside living bodies. Mangelsdorf and his
colleagues had used mouse models created for their earlier FXR studies. Those
FXR-positive and FXR-negative mouse models allowed the researchers to test
whether guggulsterone and FXR reacted the same way in living bodies as they did
in the assays.
The mouse model tests confirmed the assay results
and showed that cholesterol levels fell in FXR-positive mice that were given
guggulsterone.
Mangelsdorf believes the work could lead to new
drugs to control cholesterol by creating compounds based on the chemical
structure of guggulsterone. Those drugs would prevent FXR from interrupting
cholesterol metabolism in people whose bodies aren’t getting rid of enough
cholesterol before the process shuts down.
The gum resin of the guggul tree has been used in
Ayurvedic medicine, a traditional Hindu medicine practiced in India for nearly
3,000 years, to treat a wide variety of ailments, including obesity and lipid
disorders. An ethyl acetate extract of this resin has been found to lower
low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides in humans. Since receiving
regulatory approval in India in 1987, this extract, called guglipid, has been
widely and effectively used to treat hyperlipidemia, according to the study
researchers.
###
Amy Liverman, a student research assistant in
Mangelsdorf’s lab, led UT Southwestern’s contributions to the research.
X-Ceptor Therapeutics Inc. of San Diego also contributed to the research.
The study was supported by the National Institute
of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, HHMI, and the
Robert A. Welch Foundation.
Contact: Susan Morrison, Susan.Morrison@UTSouthwestern.edu,
214-648-3404, University
of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a University
of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas
Publishing date: May 14, 2002
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