Communities & Collections
Researchers & Labs
Titles
DGIST
LIBRARY
DGIST R&D
Detail View
Department of New Biology
Aging and Immunity Lab
1. Journal Articles
Vutiglabridin Alleviates Cellular Senescence with Metabolic Regulation and Circadian Clock in Human Dermal Fibroblasts
Heo, Jin-Woong
;
Lee, Hye-Eun
;
Lee, Jimin
;
Choi, Leo Sungwong
;
Shin, Jaejin
;
Mun, Ji-Young
;
Park, Hyung-Soon
;
Park, Sang-Chul
;
Nam, Chang-Hoon
Department of New Biology
Aging and Immunity Lab
1. Journal Articles
Citations
WEB OF SCIENCE
Citations
SCOPUS
Metadata Downloads
XML
Excel
Title
Vutiglabridin Alleviates Cellular Senescence with Metabolic Regulation and Circadian Clock in Human Dermal Fibroblasts
Issued Date
2024-01
Citation
Heo, Jin-Woong. (2024-01). Vutiglabridin Alleviates Cellular Senescence with Metabolic Regulation and Circadian Clock in Human Dermal Fibroblasts. Antioxidants, 13(1). doi: 10.3390/antiox13010109
Type
Article
Author Keywords
human dermal fibroblasts
;
cellular senescence
;
circadian clocks
;
metabolism
;
mitochondrial homeostasis
Keywords
OXIDATIVE STRESS
;
MITOCHONDRIAL DYSFUNCTION
;
HUMAN-CELLS
;
DNA-DAMAGE
;
KINASE
;
ACTIVATION
;
MECHANISMS
;
BMAL1
;
RHYTHM
;
CONNECTIONS
ISSN
2076-3921
Abstract
The process of cellular senescence, which is characterized by stable cell cycle arrest, is strongly associated with dysfunctional cellular metabolism and circadian rhythmicity, both of which are reported to result from and also be causal to cellular senescence. As a result, modifying any of them—senescence, metabolism, or the circadian clock—may affect all three simultaneously. Obesity accelerates aging by disrupting the homeostasis of reactive oxygen species (ROS) via an increased mitochondrial burden of fatty acid oxidation. As a result, if senescence, metabolism, and circadian rhythm are all linked, anti-obesity treatments may improve metabolic regulation while also alleviating senescence and circadian rhythm. Vutiglabridin is a small molecule in clinical trials that improves obesity by enhancing mitochondrial function. We found that chronic treatment of senescent primary human dermal fibroblasts (HDFs) with vutiglabridin alleviates all investigated markers of cellular senescence (SA-β-gal, CDKN1A, CDKN2A) and dysfunctional cellular circadian rhythm (BMAL1) while remarkably preventing the alterations of mitochondrial function and structure that occur during the process of cellular senescence. Our results demonstrate the significant senescence-alleviating effects of vutiglabridin, specifically with the restoration of cellular circadian rhythmicity and metabolic regulation. These data support the potential development of vutiglabridin against aging-associated diseases and corroborate the intricate link between cellular senescence, metabolism, and the circadian clock. © 2024 by the authors.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/47978
DOI
10.3390/antiox13010109
Publisher
MDPI
Show Full Item Record
File Downloads
001149373500001.pdf
공유
공유하기
Related Researcher
Nam, Chang-Hoon
남창훈
Department of New Biology
read more
Total Views & Downloads