Islamabad, Dec 13 : Researchers at the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute at Virginia
Tech have discovered how abscisic acid, a natural plant hormone with known
beneficial properties for the treatment of disease, helps fight inflammation.
The results, which are published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry,
reveal important new drug targets for the development of treatments for
inflammatory and immune-mediated diseases.
The scientists had reported
some of the key molecular events in the immune system of mice that contribute to
inflammation-related disease, including the involvement of a specific molecule
found on the surface of immune cells involved in the body's fight against
infection. They have now gone one step further and revealed the mechanism by
which the natural drug abscisic acid interacts with this protein, known as
peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma, to block inflammation and the
subsequent onset of disease.
"In previous work, our research group
demonstrated that abscisic acid has beneficial effects on several conditions and
diseases including obesity-related inflammation, diabetes, atherosclerosis, and
inflammatory bowel disease," said Josep Bassaganya-Riera, associate professor of
immunology at the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute, leader of the Nutritional
Immunology and Molecular Medicine Group in the institute's CyberInfrastructure
Division, and principal investigator of the study. "One idea for how abscisic
acid reduces inflammation in these instances is that it binds to a special
region of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma, a binding site known
as the ligand-binding domain where the drug would be expected to latch on to and
exert its effect. Our results show that this is not the case and, for the first
time, we have demonstrated that abscisic acid works independently of this
ligand-binding domain of the receptor."
"This information is significant
because it suggests the existence of new therapeutic targets or alternative
modes of action that account for the effects of abscisic acid in the immune
system," added Bassaganya-Riera. "Drugs that bind to the ligand-binding domain
of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma such as Avandia are
associated with severe cardiovascular side effects. In contrast, the newly
discovered alternative mechanism of peroxisome proliferator-activated
receptor-gamma activation by abscisic acid does not appear to be linked to any
known adverse side effects, thereby representing a promising new therapeutic
avenue."
"The outcomes of this research illustrate the synergism that can
result from combining computational and experimental approaches to characterize
therapeutic targets," said David Bevan, associate professor of biochemistry at
Virginia Tech. "By using molecular modeling approaches we were able to identify
a potential binding site for abscisic acid on the lanthionine synthetase C-like
2 protein, a protein required for the beneficial health effects of abscisic
acid. We were also able, again using docking studies, to reveal reasons for the
lack of direct association of abscisic acid with peroxisome
proliferator-activated receptor-gamma, which was experimentally validated by
ligand-binding assays."
"Lanthionine synthetase C-like 2 represents the
first step in a pathway leading to activation of peroxisome
proliferator-activated receptor-gamma in immune cells by abscisic acid," said
Raquel Hontecillas, assistant professor of immunology at the Virginia
Bioinformatics Institute and one of the lead investigators of the study. "We
have also shown that abscisic acid affects the expression of several genes
involved in inflammation, metabolism and cell signaling, which provides further
clues for possible intervention points in the treatment of inflammatory and
immune-mediated diseases."
The researchers hope to more closely pinpoint
some of the new drug targets in the molecular network of the immune response as
they continue to dissect the way that the naturally occurring drug abscisic acid
reduces damage due to inflammation. In addition, the novel understanding on how
abscisic acid works will be used to develop new classes of drugs that target the
same alternative pathway of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma
activation, a potentially safer approach than the use of drugs that target
direct binding to the receptor.
Ends
SA/EN
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» How natural drug, abscisic acid, fights inflammation
How natural drug, abscisic acid, fights inflammation
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