Potential of Fatty Acid Amide Hydrolase (FAAH), Monoacylglycerol Lipase (MAGL), and Diacylglycerol Lipase (DAGL) Enzymes as Targets for Obesity Treatment: A Narrative Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Search Strategy
3. Current Evidence for a Role of Modulating FAAH, MAGL, and DAGL Activity in Obesity-Related Outcomes
3.1. Animal Studies Involving Pharmacological Manipulation
3.2. Animal Studies Involving Genetic Manipulation
3.3. Human Studies Involving Genetic Association
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reference | Species/Strain and Sex | Drug, Dose, and Route of Administration | Key Findings |
---|---|---|---|
FAAH Inhibitors | |||
Balsevich et al. (2018) [26] | C57BL/6 mice, male | 0.3 mg/kg of URB597 i.p. | After a 12-h overnight fast followed by treatment with URB597, leptin administration was unable to significantly reduce body weight gain or food intake |
Cifani et al. (2020) [27] | Sprague-Dawley rats, male | 10 mg/kg of PF-3845 i.p. | No significant impact on body weight |
Liu et al. (2013) [28] | C57BL/6 and SV/129 mice, male | 5 mg/kg of URB597 i.p | SCD1−/− mice fed a HFD demonstrated glucose intolerance and insulin resistance after treatment with URB597 SCD1−/− mice fed a HFD had significantly higher levels of plasma insulin after URB597 administration |
DAGL Inhibitors | |||
Bisogno et al. (2013) [29] | C57BL/6 mice, male | O-7460 i.p.; 0 mg/kg, 6 mg/kg, and 12 mg/kg | O-7460 dose-dependently decreased intake of a HFD over 14 h O-7460 (12 mg/kg) significantly decreased body weight at 14 h |
Palma-Chavez et al. (2019) [30] | Sprague-Dawley rats, female | 30 μL (at 5 × 107 IFU/mL) of shRNA DAGLα-inhibiting adenovirus; administered into third ventricle | In fasting conditions, inhibition of DAGLα reduced NPY and increased POMC expression; in response to glucose, DAGLα inhibition increased NPY expression but decreased POMC (opposite in control rats) |
Reference | Species/Strain and Sex | Gene(s) of Interest and Genetic Manipulation * | Key Findings |
---|---|---|---|
Balsevich et al. (2018) [26] | C57BL/6 mice, male | Mouse line with Faah C385A knock-in | After a 16-h overnight fast, C385A knock-in mice did not demonstrate an expected decrease in cumulative food intake or body weight after leptin administration |
Brown et al. (2012) [33] | 129SvJ-C57BL/6 mice, both male and female | Faah −/− mice | Faah−/− mice had significantly high levels of liver triglycerides and liver diacylglycerols compared to WT mice Deletion of Faah resulted in ectopic lipid accumulation at the liver |
Chon et al. (2012) [36] | C57/BL6J-SJL mice, male | Small intestine Mgll was overexpressed in mice (iMGL mice) | After three weeks of a HFD, iMGL mice (vs. WT) had significantly greater weight gain, increased percent body fat, increased adipose tissue mass, greater ectopic fat depositions in the liver and small intestine, and increased foot intake with reduced energy expenditure |
Douglass et al. (2015) [39] | 129/SvEv-C57BL/6 mice, both male and female | Mgll−/− mice | At baseline, Mgll −/− and WT mice did not differ in body weight Throughout 12 weeks of feeding, Mgll −/− mice had lower body weight compared to WT mice, in both males and females, and under both HFD and low-fat diets LFD At baseline and after 12 weeks of low-fat dieting, Mgll −/− mice had a significantly lower fat mass than WT mice Throughout the 12-week feeding period, there were no significant differences in cumulative or average daily food intake; after the feeding period, LFD-fed male Mgll −/− mice had a significantly higher cumulative food intake Male Mgll −/− mice had significantly lower triglyceride and cholesterol levels under both diets; when considering both sexes, only Mgll −/− fed a HFD demonstrated significantly lower triglyceride and cholesterol levels |
Grevengoed et al. (2019) [34] | C57BL/6N mice, male | Single amino-acid substitution in Faah (S268D) that selectively disrupts N-acyl taurine (NAT) but not N-acylethanolamine (NAE) hydrolytic activity | Faah-S268D mice had improved insulin sensitivity, increased glucagon secretion after insulin, and lower food intake in response to leptin treatment compared to WT mice |
Jung et al. (2012) [35] | C57BL/6J mice, male | Mgll gene; generation of mice with forebrain neurons overexpressing Mgll (using CaMKIIα promoter) | Mgll-overexpressing mice showed reduced weight gain, decreased adiposity, and increased lean mass compared to WT mice; this was accompanied by lower plasma triglyceride levels, decreased serum glucose levels, and increased glucose uptake despite increased frequency of feeding and greater food intake Mgll-overexpressing mice were resistant to diet-induced obesity compared to WT |
Powell et al. (2015) [40] | 129S5/SvEvBrd x C57BL/6-Tyrc−Brd mice, both male and female | Dagla and Daglb genes; generation of Dagla KO, Daglb KO, and Dagla/Daglb double KO mice | Dagla KO mice had significantly lower body weight and body fat mass compared to WT mice (under both chow-fed and HFD) Dagla KO mice had significantly lower total food intake compared to WT mice Dagla KO mice had significantly lower fasting insulin, total triglyceride, and total cholesterol compared to WT mice |
Tardelli et al. (2019) [37] | C57BL/6 mice, male | Mgll −/− mice | Under either chow or Western diet, Mgll −/− mice experienced significantly less weight gain compared to WT mice, but Mgll −/− mice had a significantly greater gonadal white adipose tissue to body weight ratio; no significant differences in food intake Mgll −/− fed under a Western diet had significantly lower levels of plasma and hepatic triglycerides and plasma insulin compared to WT mice; no significant differences in plasma cholesterol |
Touriño et al. (2010) [31] | 129SvJ-C57BL/6 mice, male | Faah −/− mice | Faah−/− mice had significantly greater body weight (standard diet and high-fat diet) compared to WT mice; this difference increased over time in Faah−/−mice fed with the HFD No significant effect on total food intake; however, Faah−/− mice demonstrated greater reinforcement and motivation effects from food When fed a HFD, Faah−/− mice had significantly higher fat mass, triglyceride levels, glucose, and insulin levels compared to WT mice |
Vaitheesvaran et al. (2012) [32] | C57BL/6 mice, male | Faah −/− mice | Faah −/− mice had significantly higher body weight, food intake (regular chow diet), and fat mass compared to WT mice Faah −/− mice had significantly higher levels of plasma insulin and plasma triglycerides compared to WT mice |
Yoshida et al. (2019) [38] | C57BL/6 mice, male | Mgll −/− mice | Mgll −/− and WT mice had similar body weight gain and food intake when fed a normal chow diet; however, when fed a HFD, Mgll −/− mice gained less weight compared to WT mice Mgll −/− mice had significantly better glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity compared to WT mice Mgll −/− mice had significantly lighter liver weights compared to WT mice, indicative of less ectopic fat accumulation in the liver Following oral gavage with olive oil, Mgll −/− mice had significantly lower plasma triglyceride levels compared to WT mice |
Reference | Sample | Gene(s) and Variant(s) and Study Design | Key Findings |
---|---|---|---|
Aberle et al. (2007) [43] | n = 451 obese/overweight (BMI > 25 kg/m2) and dyslipidemic | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity-related traits at baseline and after a 6-week diet intervention | No baseline association After six weeks of low-fat diet, there were significant decreases in triglyceride and total cholesterol levels in CA/AA vs. CC |
Bhatia et al. (2010) [69] | n = 147 with BMI < 30 kg/m2 n = 142 with BMI > 40 kg/m2 | A novel algorithm called RareCover used to analyze the contribution of rare genetic variants in FAAH and MGLL to the development of obesity phenotypes (based on BMI) | Two 5 Kbp regions in the upstream regulatory segments of FAAH and MGLL genes identified, rare variants that could hinder FAAH and MGLL gene expression |
De Luis et al. (2010) [46] | n = 279 obese females | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity-related traits | No significant association with anthropometric parameters or dietary intake A-allele significantly associated with lower triglycerides, glucose, and HOMA |
De Luis et al. (2010) [48] | n = 143 obese females | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity-related traits | No significant differences in anthropometric parameters or food intake Significantly higher levels of glucose, insulin, and HOMA in C/C (wildtype) vs. A-allele carriers |
De Luis et al. (2010) [50] | n = 70 with Type-II Diabetes Mellitus and obesity (BMI > 30 kg/m2) | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity-related traits | A-allele carriers had significantly higher BMI, fat mass, waist circumference, insulin, HOMA, and lower adiponectin vs. wildtype (C/C) No significant difference in dietary intake |
De Luis et al. (2010) [51] | n = 67 with BMI > 40 kg/m2 who had undergone biliopancreatic diversion | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity-related traits at baseline, and then 3, 9, and 12 months after surgery | No significant baseline differences in anthropometric or biochemical parameters At 9 and 12 months, weight loss was greater in A-allele carriers vs. wildtype (C/C) |
De Luis et al. (2010) [52] | n = 248 with BMI > 30 kg/m2 | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity-related traits at baseline and after a 3-month diet intervention (low fat or low carbohydrate) | No significant difference between genotypes at baseline or 3 months in anthropometric outcomes, cardiovascular risk factors, or circulating adipocytokines In both diet intervention groups, A-allele carriers failed to show improvement in glucose, insulin, HOMA, and leptin, while wildtype (C/C) did |
De Luis et al. (2011) [47] | n = 122 with BMI > 30 kg/m2 | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity-related traits at baseline and after a 3-month diet intervention (hypocaloric) | At baseline, there were no genotype differences in anthropometric or dietary intake measures, but A-allele carriers had significantly lower insulin, HOMA, and C-reactive protein vs. wildtype (C/C) After 3 months, weight, waist circumference, insulin, C-reactive protein, and triglyceride levels were lower in A-allele carriers vs. wildtype (C/C), with no difference in dietary intake |
De Luis et al. (2012) [45] | n = 799 with mean BMI of 36.7 kg/m2 | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity-related traits and metabolic syndrome | No significant association with metabolic syndrome No significant differences in anthropometric measures or circulating adipocytokines by genotype, but insulin and HOMA were significantly higher in A-allele carriers vs. wildtype (C/C) |
De Luis et al. (2013) [44] | n = 95 with BMI > 30 kg/m2 | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity-related traits at baseline and after a 3-month diet intervention (enriched monounsaturated fat hypocaloric) | No significant differences at baseline between genotypes After 3 months, the wildtype group (C/C) showed greater improvements in insulin, HOMA-R, weight, fat mass, and waist circumference vs. A-allele carriers |
De Luis et al. (2013) [49] | n = 99 with BMI > 30 kg/m2 | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity-related traits at baseline and after a 3-month diet intervention (enriched polyunsaturated fat hypocaloric) | No significant differences at baseline between genotypes After 3 months, there were no significant genotype differences in anthropometric parameter or adipokine changes, while there was improvement in insulin and HOMA-R in wildtype (C/C) vs. A-allele carriers |
Durand et al. (2008) [53] | n = 1340 healthy adult controls n = 635 obese children n = 896 adults with Class III obesity, i.e., BMI ≥ 40 kg/m2 n = 2238 adults with Type-II Diabetes Mellitus | FAAH—10 SNPs across the entire FAAH locus, including Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420); rs913168, rs17361950, rs6429600, rs324419, rs324418, rs2295633, rs11576941, rs324425, rs7520850 Case-control genetic association | No significant associations with childhood obesity or Type-II Diabetes Mellitus Nominally significant association between rs324420 (C allele was risk allele) and 5 other FAAH SNPs (rs6429600, rs324419, rs324418, rs2295633, and rs7520850) and Class III (adult) obesity No significant association between rs324420 SNP and metabolic traits |
Grolmusz et al. (2013) [54] | n = 63 patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (mean BMI 29.6 kg/m2) n = 67 healthy controls (mean BMI 21.2 kg/m2) | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Case-control genetic association | In cases, free thyroxine was higher in A-allele carriers than wildtype (C/C) In controls, insulin was significantly lower in A-allele carriers than wildtype (C/C) No other significant associations (including BMI) |
Harismendy et al. (2010) [70] | n = 147 with BMI < 30 kg/m2 n = 142 with BMI > 40 kg/m2 | Sequence-based case-control genetic association (FAAH and MGLL) | One interval in FAAH promoter and 3 intervals in MGLL (promoter, intron 2, intron 3) were associated with obesity |
Jensen et al. (2007) [62] | n = 5801 classified as normal weight = BMI 18.5–25 kg/m2, overweight = BMI 25–30 kg/m2, and obese = BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association | No significant association with BMI or waist circumference groups or with any quantitative trait |
Knoll et al. (2012) [63] | n = 453 overweight or obese children and adolescents (mean 10.8 years old) | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity-related traits at baseline and after a 1-year lifestyle intervention | No significant association with change in any outcome |
Kuk et al. (2013) [71] | n = 148 with BMI > 40 kg/m2 n = 150 with BMI < 30 kg/m2 | Sequence-based case-control genetic association (FAAH and MGLL) | Three potentially causal rare variants were identified around MGLL An interaction between two rare variants around FAAH was identified that may increase the risk of obesity |
Lieb et al. (2009) [64] | n = 2415 participants from a longitudinal cohort | FAAH—9 SNPs across the entire FAAH locus, including Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420); rs12073998, rs6703669, rs3766246, rs324419, rs2295633, rs12029329, rs324425, rs7520850 Genetic association | No significant associations |
Mansouri et al. (2020) [65] | n = 79 healthy participants | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) | No significant difference in mean BMI between genotypes |
Martins et al. (2015) [66] | n = 100 with BMI ≥ 18.5 kg/m2 and < 25 kg/m2 n = 100 with BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with obesity and insulin-resistant phenotype | No significant associations |
Monteleone et al. (2008) [55] | n = 115 overweight/obese females with binge-eating disorder (BED) n = 74 obese females without BED n = 110 healthy controls | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Case-control genetic association | A allele was significantly more frequent in overweight/obese females compared to controls |
Muller et al. (2010) [56] | n = 521 children and adolescents (mean BMI 31.86 kg/m2) and both biological parents n = 501 German children and adolescents (including one sibling) (mean BMI 32.28 kg/m2) and both biological parents n = 8491 adults (mean BMI 27.12 kg/m2) from a population-based study group n = 985 cases (mean BMI 36.04 kg/m2) and n = 588 controls (mean BMI 19.34 kg/m2) | FAAH—five SNPs, including Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420); rs324419, rs873978, rs2295632 and rs932816 Genetic association first in a sample of trios, then replicated in a second cohort of families, then in combined sample SNPs significantly associated with childhood obesity were then screened in a population-based cohort of adults, and then in a case-control sample | Association of G allele of FAAH rs2295632 with early onset obesity in the initial sample of trios, but this did not replicate in the subsequent sample When the two samples were combined, FAAH rs324420 (C allele) and rs2295632 were significantly associated with childhood obesity No significant association between FAAH rs324420 or rs2295632 and adult obesity or BMI in the population-based sample; no significant association with rs324420 in the case-control analysis |
Ning et al. (2017) [72] | n = 227 with BMI 35.1–61.7 kg/m2 n = 219 with BMI 17.5–23.0 kg/m2 | FAAH—whole-exome sequencing | The novel FAAH c.G944T (p.R315I) variant co-segregated with obesity in the proband’s pedigree; in vitro characterization of FAAH-R315I suggested that it is a loss-of-function mutation |
Papazoglou et al. (2008) [67] | n = 158 with BMI > 40 kg/m2 n = 145 with BMI > 40 kg/m2 and metabolic syndrome n = 121 with BMI 18.5–25 kg/m2 | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Case-control genetic association | No significant associations |
Sipe et al. (2005) [57] | n = 2667 (1688 White, 614 Black, 365 Asian) | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Case-control genetic association | Significant association of A/A genotype with overweight/obese status in Black and White, but not Asian, participants Median BMI was higher in the A/A genotype group compared to C/A + C/C in the pooled sample |
Thethi et al. (2020) [58] | n = 465 with BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 n = 202 with BMI ≤ 27 kg/m2 | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Case-control genetic association | Significant association of the A allele with obesity, but not when adjusting for age, race, sex, waist-hip ratio, and LDL No association with any other outcome measure |
Vazquez-Roque et al. (2011) [59] | n = 62 adults overweight or obese (n = 5, mean BMI 24.0 kg/m2; n = 28, mean BMI 28.1 kg/m2; n = 29, mean BMI 34.9 kg/m2) | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with gastric emptying (GE) of solids and liquids, gastric volume (GV), and satiation [maximum tolerated volume (MTV) after nutrient drink test] | No significant association with GE of solids or liquids, GV, or aggregate symptom score Significant association with MTV: lower MTV in the CC genotype vs. CA/AA |
Yagin et al. (2019) [60] | n = 180 healthy overweight/obese women (BMI = 25–40 kg/m2) n = 86 women with BMI = 18.5–24.9 kg/m2 | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Case-control genetic association | A/A and C/A genotypes were more frequent in overweight/obese women A-allele carriers had significantly higher BMI, waist circumference, neck circumference, waist-to-height ratio, and body fat mass A-allele significantly predicted risk of obesity after adjusting for age, marital status, and physical activity. (OR: 2.38; 95% CI = 1.37–3.79) |
Yagin et al. (2020) [68] | n = 180 women (mean BMI 32.54 kg/m2) | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) Genetic association with binge eating disorder | No significant association, though the frequency of the A allele was numerically higher in women with binge eating disorder (p = 0.08) |
Zhang et al. (2009) [61] | n = 1644 (from 261 extended families) | FAAH—Pro129Thr SNP (rs324420) and four additional SNPs (rs324418, rs1984490, rs2145408 and rs4141964) Genetic association with obesity-related traits | A-allele of rs324420 was significantly associated with higher BMI and fasting triglyceride levels compared to wildtype (C/C genotype) |
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Matheson, J.; Zhou, X.M.M.; Bourgault, Z.; Le Foll, B. Potential of Fatty Acid Amide Hydrolase (FAAH), Monoacylglycerol Lipase (MAGL), and Diacylglycerol Lipase (DAGL) Enzymes as Targets for Obesity Treatment: A Narrative Review. Pharmaceuticals 2021, 14, 1316. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph14121316
Matheson J, Zhou XMM, Bourgault Z, Le Foll B. Potential of Fatty Acid Amide Hydrolase (FAAH), Monoacylglycerol Lipase (MAGL), and Diacylglycerol Lipase (DAGL) Enzymes as Targets for Obesity Treatment: A Narrative Review. Pharmaceuticals. 2021; 14(12):1316. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph14121316
Chicago/Turabian StyleMatheson, Justin, Xin Ming Matthew Zhou, Zoe Bourgault, and Bernard Le Foll. 2021. "Potential of Fatty Acid Amide Hydrolase (FAAH), Monoacylglycerol Lipase (MAGL), and Diacylglycerol Lipase (DAGL) Enzymes as Targets for Obesity Treatment: A Narrative Review" Pharmaceuticals 14, no. 12: 1316. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph14121316