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HMBA ameliorates obesity by MYH9‐ and ACTG1‐dependent regulation of hypothalamic neuropeptides

Title
HMBA ameliorates obesity by MYH9‐ and ACTG1‐dependent regulation of hypothalamic neuropeptides
Author(s)
Park, SeokjaeOh, SungjoonKim, NayounKim, Eun-Kyoung
Issued Date
2023-12
Citation
EMBO Molecular Medicine, v.15, no.12
Type
Article
Author Keywords
ACTG1anti-obesityhexamethylene bisacetamidehypothalamic neuropeptidesMYH9
Keywords
NERVOUS-SYSTEM CONTROLHEXAMETHYLENE BISACETAMIDEFOOD-INTAKEP-TEFBHEXIM1 EXPRESSIONPROTEIN-SYNTHESISGENE-EXPRESSIONBODY-WEIGHTCANCERCONDITIONED TASTE-AVERSION
ISSN
1757-4676
Abstract
The global epidemic of obesity remains a daunting problem. Here, we report hexamethylene bisacetamide (HMBA) as a potent anti-obesity compound. Peripheral and central administration of HMBA to diet-induced obese mice regulated the expression of hypothalamic neuropeptides critical for energy balance, leading to beneficial metabolic effects such as anorexia and weight loss. We found that HMBA bound to MYH9 and ACTG1, which were required for the anti-obesity effects of HMBA in both NPY-expressing and POMC-expressing neurons. The binding of HMBA to MYH9 and ACTG1 elevated the expression of HEXIM1 and enhanced its interaction with MDM2, resulting in the dissociation of the HEXIM1–p53 complex in hypothalamic cells. Subsequently, the free HEXIM1 and p53 translocated to the nucleus, where they downregulated the transcription of orexigenic NPY, but p53 and acetylated histone 3 upregulated that of anorexigenic POMC. Our study points to a previously unappreciated efficacy of HMBA and reveals its mechanism of action in metabolic regulation, which may propose HMBA as a potential therapeutic strategy for obesity. © 2023 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/46648
DOI
10.15252/emmm.202318024
Publisher
EMBO
Related Researcher
  • 김은경 Kim, Eun-Kyoung
  • Research Interests Neural functions in metabolic diseases; 뇌신경세포와 비만; 당뇨 등의 대사 질환 관련 연구
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Appears in Collections:
Department of Brain Sciences Lab of Neuro-Metabolism & Neurometabolomic Research Center 1. Journal Articles

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