Abstract

K-111 has been characterized as a potent peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)α activator. Antidiabetic potency and amelioration of disturbed lipid metabolism were demonstrated in rodents, which were accompanied by elevations of peroxisomal enzymes and liver weight. To examine the possible therapeutic application of K-111 we have now assessed its efficacy in non-human primates with high transferability to humans. For this purpose obese, hypertriglyceridaemic, hyperinsulinaemic prediabetic rhesus monkeys were dosed sequentially with 0, 1, 3 and 10 mg/kg per day orally over a period of 4 weeks each. In addition, the effect of K-111 on the peroxisome compartment was analyzed in cynomolgus monkeys using liver samples obtained following a 13-week oral toxicity study. In prediabetic monkeys, the reduction of hyperinsulinaemia and improvement of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake rate indicated amelioration of insulin resistance. These effects were nearly maximal at a dose of 3 mg/kg per day, while triglycerides and body weight were lowered significantly in a dose-dependent manner. This reduction of body weight contrasts sharply with the adipogenic response observed with thiazolidinediones, another family of insulin-sensitizing agents. In young cynomolgus monkeys at a dosage of 5 mg/kg per day and more, K-111 induced an up to three-fold increase in lipid β-oxidation enzymes with an 1.5- to 2-fold increase in peroxisome volume density. This moderate increase in peroxisomal activity by K-111 in monkeys is consistent with its role as an PPARα activator and corresponds to the observations with fibrates in other low responder mammalian species. The increase in β-oxidation may explain, at least in part, the lipid modulating effect as well as the antidiabetic potency of K-111. This pharmacological profile makes K-111 a highly promising drug candidate for clinical applications in the treatment of type 2 diabetes, dyslipidaemia, obesity and the metabolic syndrome.

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