[HTML][HTML] Hybrid inhibitor of peripheral cannabinoid-1 receptors and inducible nitric oxide synthase mitigates liver fibrosis

R Cinar, MR Iyer, Z Liu, Z Cao, T Jourdan, K Erdelyi… - JCI insight, 2016 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
R Cinar, MR Iyer, Z Liu, Z Cao, T Jourdan, K Erdelyi, G Godlewski, G Szanda, J Liu, JK Park…
JCI insight, 2016ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Liver fibrosis, a consequence of chronic liver injury and a way station to cirrhosis and
hepatocellular carcinoma, lacks effective treatment. Endocannabinoids acting via
cannabinoid-1 receptors (CB 1 R) induce profibrotic gene expression and promote
pathologies that predispose to liver fibrosis. CB 1 R antagonists produce opposite effects,
but their therapeutic development was halted due to neuropsychiatric side effects. Inducible
nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) also promotes liver fibrosis and its underlying pathologies, but …
Abstract
Liver fibrosis, a consequence of chronic liver injury and a way station to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, lacks effective treatment. Endocannabinoids acting via cannabinoid-1 receptors (CB 1 R) induce profibrotic gene expression and promote pathologies that predispose to liver fibrosis. CB 1 R antagonists produce opposite effects, but their therapeutic development was halted due to neuropsychiatric side effects. Inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) also promotes liver fibrosis and its underlying pathologies, but iNOS inhibitors tested to date showed limited therapeutic efficacy in inflammatory diseases. Here, we introduce a peripherally restricted, orally bioavailable CB 1 R antagonist, which accumulates in liver to release an iNOS inhibitory leaving group. In mouse models of fibrosis induced by CCl 4 or bile duct ligation, the hybrid CB 1 R/iNOS antagonist surpassed the antifibrotic efficacy of the CB 1 R antagonist rimonabant or the iNOS inhibitor 1400W, without inducing anxiety-like behaviors or CB 1 R occupancy in the CNS. The hybrid inhibitor also targeted CB 1 R-independent, iNOS-mediated profibrotic pathways, including increased PDGF, Nlrp3/Asc3, and integrin αvβ6 signaling, as judged by its ability to inhibit these pathways in cnr1–/–but not in nos2–/–mice. Additionally, it was able to slow fibrosis progression and to attenuate established fibrosis. Thus, dual-target peripheral CB 1 R/iNOS antagonists have therapeutic potential in liver fibrosis.
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