What was old can be new again

A new approach helps to spot drugs that can be repurposed to treat insulin resistance.

Image credit: Public domain

Developing a new drug that is both safe and effective is a complex and expensive endeavor. An alternative approach is to ‘repurpose’ existing, safe compounds – that is, to establish if they could treat conditions others than the ones they were initially designed for. To achieve this, methods that can predict the activity of thousands of established drugs are necessary.

These approaches are particularly important for conditions for which it is hard to find promising treatment. This includes, for instance, heart failure, dementia and other diseases that are linked to the activity of the hormone insulin becoming modified throughout the body, a defect called insulin resistance. Unfortunately, it is difficult to model the complex actions of insulin using cells in the lab, because they involve intricate networks of proteins, tissues and metabolites.

Timmons et al. set out to develop a way to better assess whether a drug could be repurposed to treat insulin resistance. The aim was to build a biological signature of the disease in multiple human tissues, as this would help to make the findings more relevant to the clinic. This involved examining which genes were switched on or off in thousands of tissue samples from patients with different degrees of insulin resistance. Importantly, some of the patients had their condition reversed through lifestyle changes, while others did not respond well to treatment. These ‘non-responders’ provided crucial new clues to screen for active drugs.

Carefully piecing the data together revealed the molecules and pathways most related to the severity of insulin resistance. Cross-referencing these results with the way existing drugs act on gene activity, highlighted 138 compounds that directly bind 73 proteins responsible for regulating insulin resistance pathways. Some of the drugs identified are suitable for short-term clinical studies, and it may even be possible to rank similar compounds based on their chemical activity.

Beyond giving a glimpse into the complex molecular mechanisms of insulin resistance in humans, Timmons et al. provide a fresh approach to how drugs could be repurposed, which could be adapted to other conditions.