한빛사논문
한양대학교, University of Utah School of Medicine
Young-WookWon1,2†, Partho Protim Adhikary1†‡, Kwang Suk Lim1, Hyung Jin Kim1, Jang Kyoung Kim1 and Yong-Hee Kim1*
1Department of Bioengineering, Institute for Bioengineering and Biopharmaceutical Research, Hanyang University, Seoul 133-791, Republic of Korea, 2Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah 84132, USA. †These authors contributed equally to this work. ‡Present address: National Life Sciences Hub (NalSH), Charles Sturt University,WaggaWagga, New SouthWales 2678, Australia.
*Correspondence to: Yong-Hee Kim
Abstract
Commercial anti-obesity drugs acting in the gastrointestinal tract or the central nervous system have been shown to have limited efficacy and severe side effects. Anti-obesity drug development is thus focusing on targeting adipocytes that store excess fat. Here, we show that an adipocyte-targeting fusion-oligopeptide gene carrier consisting of an adipocyte-targeting sequence and 9-arginine (ATS?9R) selectively transfects mature adipocytes by binding to prohibitin. Injection of ATS-9R into obese mice confirmed specific binding of ATS-9R to fat vasculature, internalization and gene expression in adipocytes. We also constructed a short-hairpin RNA (shRNA) for silencing fatty-acid-binding protein 4 (shFABP4), a key lipid chaperone in fatty-acid uptake and lipid storage in adipocytes. Treatment of obese mice with ATS-9R/shFABP4 led to metabolic recovery and body-weight reduction (>20%). The ATS-9R/shFABP4 oligopeptide complex could prove to be a safe therapeutic approach to regress and treat obesity as well as obesity-induced metabolic syndromes.
논문정보
소속기관 논문보기
관련분야 논문보기