Ouabagenin is a naturally occurring LXR ligand without causing hepatic steatosis as a side effect

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Abstract

Ouabagenin (OBG) is an aglycone of the cardiotonic steroid ouabain and until now was considered a biologically inactive biosynthetic precursor. Herein, we revealed that OBG functions as a novel class of ligand for the liver X receptor (LXR). Luciferase reporter assays and in silico docking studies suggested that OBG has LXR-selective agonistic activity. In addition, OBG repressed the expression of epithelial sodium channel (ENaC), a LXR target gene, without causing hepatic steatosis, a typical side effect of conventional LXR ligands. This remarkable biological activity can be attributed to a unique mode of action; the LXR agonist activity mainly proceeds through the LXRβ subtype without affecting LXRα, unlike conventional LXR ligands. Thus, OBG is a novel class of LXR ligand that does not cause severe side effects, with potential for use as an antihypertensive diuretic or a tool compound for exploring LXR subtype-specific biological functions.

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Tamura, S., Okada, M., Kato, S., Shinoda, Y., Shioda, N., Fukunaga, K., … Ueda, M. (2018). Ouabagenin is a naturally occurring LXR ligand without causing hepatic steatosis as a side effect. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-20663-z

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