Back to Search Start Over

The aldolase inhibitor aldometanib mimics glucose starvation to activate lysosomal AMPK

Authors :
Chen-Song Zhang
Mengqi Li
Yu Wang
Xiaoyang Li
Yue Zong
Shating Long
Mingliang Zhang
Jin-Wei Feng
Xiaoyan Wei
Yan-Hui Liu
Baoding Zhang
Jianfeng Wu
Cixiong Zhang
Wenhua Lian
Teng Ma
Xiao Tian
Qi Qu
Yaxin Yu
Jinye Xiong
Dong-Tai Liu
Zhenhua Wu
Mingxia Zhu
Changchuan Xie
Yaying Wu
Zheni Xu
Chunyan Yang
Junjie Chen
Guohong Huang
Qingxia He
Xi Huang
Lei Zhang
Xiufeng Sun
Qingfeng Liu
Abdul Ghafoor
Fu Gui
Kaili Zheng
Wen Wang
Zhi-Chao Wang
Yong Yu
Qingliang Zhao
Shu-Yong Lin
Zhi-Xin Wang
Hai-Long Piao
Xianming Deng
Sheng-Cai Lin
Source :
Nature metabolism. 4(10)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The activity of 5′-adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is inversely correlated with the cellular availability of glucose. When glucose levels are low, the glycolytic enzyme aldolase is not bound to fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) and, instead, signals to activate lysosomal AMPK. Here, we show that blocking FBP binding to aldolase with the small molecule aldometanib selectively activates the lysosomal pool of AMPK and has beneficial metabolic effects in rodents. We identify aldometanib in a screen for aldolase inhibitors and show that it prevents FBP from binding to v-ATPase-associated aldolase and activates lysosomal AMPK, thereby mimicking a cellular state of glucose starvation. In male mice, aldometanib elicits an insulin-independent glucose-lowering effect, without causing hypoglycaemia. Aldometanib also alleviates fatty liver and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis in obese male rodents. Moreover, aldometanib extends lifespan and healthspan in both Caenorhabditis elegans and mice. Taken together, aldometanib mimics and adopts the lysosomal AMPK activation pathway associated with glucose starvation to exert physiological roles, and might have potential as a therapeutic for metabolic disorders in humans.

Details

ISSN :
25225812
Volume :
4
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0b69deebe0b82199eede16acba77db01