Isotretinoin and FoxO1: A scientific hypothesis

Autor(en): Melnik, B.C.
Stichwörter: alitretinoin, 5300-03-8; collagenase 3, 175449-82-8; gelatinase A, 146480-35-5; gelatinase B, 146480-36-6; insulin, 9004-10-8; isotretinoin, 4759-48-2; retinoic acid, 302-79-4; retinoid X receptor alpha, 465567-51-5; somatomedin C, 67763-96-6; tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1, 140208-24-8; tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 2, 124861-55-8; toll like receptor, 409141-78-2; toll like receptor 2, 203811-81-8; Acne; acne vulgaris; adaptive immunity; adipocyte; alanine aminotransferase blood level; alitretinoin; androgen receptor; antiinflammatory activity; aorta arch anomaly; Apoptosis; arthralgia; aspartate aminotransferase blood level; beta catenin; bone demineralization; bone density; calcification; cell cycle arrest; cell proliferation; cheilitis; collagenase 3; congenital heart malformation; craniofacial malformation; depression; down regulation; drug efficacy; drug mechanism; drug megadose; drug protein binding; dry nose; epiphysis disease; FoxO; gelatinase A; gelatinase B; gene expression regulation; genetic transcription; hair loss; hippocampus; homeostasis; human; hyperostosis; hypertriglyceridemia; innate immunity; insulin; isomerization; Isotretinoin; lipogenesis; liver toxicity; liver X receptor agonist; liver X receptor alpha; lymphoma cell; micrognathia; microtia; myalgia; nervous system malformation; neural crest cell; neuroblastoma; neutrophil gelatinase associated lipocalin; nonhuman; oxidative stress; peroxisome proliferator activated receptor gamma; prodrug; promyelocytic leukemia; psychosis; reactive oxygen metabolite; retinoic acid; retinoic acid receptor alpha; retinoid X receptor alpha; review; sebaceous gland; sebum secretion; side effect; signal transduction; somatomedin binding protein 3; somatomedin C; Stem cell; sterol regulatory element binding protein 1; sterol regulatory element binding protein 1c; suicidal behavior; teratogenicity; thymus aplasia; tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1; tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 2; toll like receptor; toll like receptor 2; transactivation; transcription factor FKHR; transcription factor FKHRL1; transcription factor Sox9; Transcriptional regulation; unindexed drug; upregulation; Wnt protein, acne; xerosis
Erscheinungsdatum: 2011
Herausgeber: Landes Bioscience
Enthalten in: Dermato-Endocrinology
Band: 3
Ausgabe: 3
Startseite: 141
Seitenende: 165
Zusammenfassung: 
Oral isotretinoin (13-cis retinoic acid) is the most effective drug in the treatment of acne and restores all major pathogenetic factors of acne vulgaris. Isotretinoin is regarded as a prodrug which after isomerizisation to all-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA) induces apoptosis in cells cultured from human sebaceous glands, meibomian glands, neuroblastoma cells, hypothalamic cells, hippocampus cells, Dalton's lymphoma ascites cells, B16F-10 melanoma cells, and neuronal crest cells and others. By means of translational research this paper provides substantial indirect evidence for isotretinoin's mode of action by upregulation of forkhead box class O (FoxO) transcription factors. FoxOs play a pivotal role in the regulation of androgen receptor transactivation, insulin/insulin like growth factor-1 (IGF-1)-signaling, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ(PPARγ)- and liver X receptor-α (LXRα)-mediated lipogenesis, β-catenin signaling, cell proliferation, apoptosis, reactive oxygene homeostasis, innate and acquired immunity, stem cell homeostasis, as well as anti-cancer effects. An accumulating body of evidence suggests that the therapeutic, adverse, teratogenic and chemopreventive effecs of isotretinoin are all mediated by upregulation of FoxO-mediated gene transcription. These FoxO-driven transcriptional changes of the second response of retinoic acid receptor (RAR)-mediated signaling counterbalance gene expression of acne due to increased growth factor signaling with downregulated nuclear FoxO proteins. The proposed isotretinoin→ATRA→RAR→FoxO interaction offers intriguing new insights into the mode of isotretinoin action and explains most therapeutic, adverse and teratogenic effects of isotretinoin in the treatment of acne by a common mode of FoxO-mediated transcriptional regulation. © 2011 Landes Bioscience.
ISSN: 19381972
DOI: 10.4161/derm.15331
Externe URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-80054030192&doi=10.4161%2fderm.15331&partnerID=40&md5=b9930bde9af37492a70ec6e1eb94c29d

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