Scimex: An experimental drug that promotes weight loss in obese mice, by causing
them to burn off excess calories, could be used in humans, say
international researchers. Although the drug has not been tested in
humans, the authors speculate that it may have a favourable safety
profile as it is chemically similar to already-approved pharmaceuticals.
A drug that promotes weight loss in obese mice by causing them to burn off excess calories is reported in a study published in Nature Communications
this week. The drug causes the mice to generate more brown and beige
fat, which are specialised tissues that burn lipid molecules to generate
heat.
Alexander Pfeifer and colleagues have now shown that a cellular
signalling pathway driven by the enzyme soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC)
activates the formation of brown and beige fat in obese mice. After
treatment with an experimental drug that stimulates sGC the mice burn
off more lipids; this then causes them to become leaner due to a
reduction in white (storage) fat.
Although the drug has not been tested in humans, the authors speculate
that it may have a favourable safety profile as it is chemically similar
and belongs to the same class as the drug riociguat, which has recently
been approved for the treatment of pulmonary hypertension. The authors
hope that their findings may provide a potential candidate for the
treatment of obesity and certain associated illnesses.