American Diabetes Association
Browse

Canagliflozin-induced adaptive metabolism in bone

figure
posted on 2025-02-11, 16:17 authored by Sher Bahadur Poudel, Carolyn Chlebek, Ryan R. Ruff, Zhiming He, Fangxi Xu, Gozde Yildirim, Bin Hu, Christopher Lawrence De Jesus, Ankita Raja Shinde, Vasudev Vivekanand Nayak, Lukasz Witek, Timothy Bromage, Thomas A Neubert, Clifford J Rosen, Shoshana Yakar

Sodium-glucose transporter-2 inhibitor (SGLT2i) drugs are widely used for lowering blood glucose levels independent of insulin. Beyond this, these drugs induce various metabolic changes, including weight loss and impaired bone integrity. There is a significant gap in understanding SGLT2i-induced skeletal changes, as SGLT2 is not expressed in osteoblasts or osteocytes, which use glucose to remodel the bone matrix. We studied the impact of 1, 3, or 6 months of canagliflozin (CANA), an SGLT2i treatment, on the skeleton of 6-month-old genetically heterogeneous UM-HET3 mice. Significant metabolic adaptations to CANA were evident as early as 1.5 months post-treatment, specifically in male mice. CANA-treated male mice exhibited notable reductions in body weight and decreased proinflammatory and bone remodeling markers associated with reduced cortical bone remodeling indices. Bone tissue metabolome indicated enrichment in metabolites related to amino acid transport and tryptophan catabolism in CANA-treated male mice. In contrast, CANA-treated female mice showed increases in nucleic acid metabolism. An integrOmics approach of source-matched bone tissue metabolome and bone marrow RNAseq indicated a positive correlation between the two omics data sets in male mice. Three clusters of transcripts and metabolites involved in energy metabolism, oxidative stress response, and cellular proliferation and differentiation were reduced in CANA-treated male mice. In conclusion, CANA affects bone metabolism mainly via the 'glucose restriction state' it induces and impacts bone cell proliferation and differentiation. These findings underline the effects of SGLT2i on bone health and highlight the need to consider sex-specific responses when developing clinical treatments that alter substrate availability.

Funding

Financial support received from the National Institutes of Health Grant R01AG056397 and B01 (2024) Department of Molecular Pathobiology Accelerator Award, RB841-001421 MEGA grant, and RAPID grant A22-0392 NYUCD, to SY. SBP is supported by the New York University Provost’s Postdoctoral Fellowship Program. This work was also supported by the National Institutes of Health grant S10 OD010751-01A1 for micro-computed tomography and S10 OD023659 to TAN for mass spectrometry.

History

Usage metrics

    Diabetes

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC