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Role of the 12-lipoxygenase pathway in diabetes pathogenesis and complications.

Citation
Dobrian, A. D., et al. “Role Of The 12-Lipoxygenase Pathway In Diabetes Pathogenesis And Complications.”. Pharmacology & Therapeutics, pp. 100-110.
Center Indiana University
Author A D Dobrian, M A Morris, D A Taylor-Fishwick, T R Holman, Y Imai, R G Mirmira, J L Nadler
Keywords inflammation, Lipoxygenase, Lipoxygenase inhibitors, type 1 diabetes, Type 2 diabetes-related complications
Abstract

12-lipoxygenase (12-LOX) is one of several enzyme isoforms responsible for the metabolism of arachidonic acid and other poly-unsaturated fatty acids to both pro- and anti-inflammatory lipid mediators. Mounting evidence has shown that 12-LOX plays a critical role in the modulation of inflammation at multiple checkpoints during diabetes development. Due to this, interventions to limit pro-inflammatory 12-LOX metabolites either by isoform-specific 12-LOX inhibition, or by providing specific fatty acid substrates via dietary intervention, has the potential to significantly and positively impact health outcomes of patients living with both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. To date, the development of truly specific and efficacious inhibitors has been hampered by homology of LOX family members; however, improvements in high throughput screening have improved the inhibitor landscape. Here, we describe the function and role of human 12-LOX, and mouse 12-LOX and 12/15-LOX, in the development of diabetes and diabetes-related complications, and describe promise in the development of strategies to limit pro-inflammatory metabolites, primarily via new small molecule 12-LOX inhibitors.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Pharmacology & therapeutics
Volume
195
Number of Pages
100-110
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1879-016X
DOI
10.1016/j.pharmthera.2018.10.010
Alternate Journal
Pharmacol. Ther.
PMID
30347209
PMCID
PMC6397662
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