Researchers are closer to developing a drug that could one day rival celebrity-touted Ozempic, as initial experiments showed that the medication could both prevent weight gain and promote weight loss.
Scientists from the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, tested the “game-changing” drug, called CPACC, on mice.
Led by Dr. Madesh Muniswamy, the director of the university’s Center for Mitochondrial Medicine, the researchers discovered that the drug curbed weight gain while indulging on foods high in sugar and fat, which are prevalent in the Western diet.
It seems to be great news for people with a sweet tooth: In theory, people could chow down on whatever they wanted without the added health risks and weight gain.
Currently, 1 in 3 Americans are overweight, per the National Institutes of Health.
“One of the main barriers to people losing weight is getting to a healthy diet and sticking to it, and also, you typically have to combine it with pretty aggressive exercise – and not everyone can exercise,” the study’s lead co-author Travis Madaris, a doctoral student working with Dr. Muniswamy, told The Post.
“This, standalone or maybe in combination with some minor lifestyle changes, would definitely be game-changing for people that struggle with losing weight.”
The study, published in Cell Reports, comes after months of A-listers using the weight-loss injectable Ozempic, a drug meant for people with type 2 diabetes. While there’s been speculation as to who exactly has been taking it, the uptick in popularity has triggered a widespread shortage, leaving diabetics empty-handed.
The Ozempic craze, however, reportedly comes with some side effects, such as a sagging face or possible intestinal obstruction. Meanwhile, the researchers did not immediately observe any side effects from CPACC although they are continuing to monitor the participating rodents.
At their core, the two medications function entirely different. Where Ozempic regulates insulin and slows digestion, which decreases appetite, CPACC inhibits how magnesium flows through the cell.
Magnesium plays a vital role in the mitochondria’s function, specifically impacting the production and consumption of cellular energy, known as adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which fuels other bodily functions.
But researchers found that magnesium can slow energy production in the mitochondria when present in excess.
If the protein-coding gene that controls the flow of magnesium to the mitochondria, known as MRS2, is deleted, the body could, in theory, process fats and sugars more efficiently, researchers found.
Researchers first edited the genes in mice to make magnesium uptake more challenging in the mitochondria, observing that the mice remained thin despite eating diets high in fat.
Cue: CPACC, which limited the uptake of magnesium and, in turn, promoted weight loss.
Researchers placed the mice under “long-term dietary stress,” or a diet high in calories and fat that is linked to obesity, cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes.
After 20 weeks consuming the Western diet, scientists injected the rodents with either a placebo or CPACC every three days for six weeks, discovering that even with a high-fat diet, the rodents didn’t gain weight, remaining “slim.”
Madaris told The Post that CPACC operates vastly different than weight-loss medications currently available.
“The mechanism of the drug is different than the mechanism of a lot of the other drugs that are on the market,” Madaris said. “So many of those drugs are very specific in targeting, say, insulin resistance, to help increase insulin production or help increase insulin sensitivity.”
While researchers were able to delete the gene in rodents, that wouldn’t be possible in humans, forcing the team to manufacture CPACC in a way that would instead inhibit the channel.
In theory, this would allow humans to take CPACC and lose weight without adapting a new diet.
While the study observed rodents consuming a poor diet, Madaris told The Post that, ideally, CPACC would be most effective if paired with lifestyle changes, such as healthy eating and exercise. However, sweeping lifestyle changes aren’t necessary, in theory, for the drug to be effective.
“The idea is that we could intervene in someone that is starting to gain weight, and their doctors are like, ‘You need to start exercising and eating healthier,’ ” Madaris said. “This could be an early intervention for people that are becoming obese.
“At the same time, they could also used in people that are already obese, ideally, probably in conjunction with eating healthier and exercise.”
But the drug’s experimentations are still in their early stages, and there’s still “a lot of steps to do.”
“These findings are the result of several years of work,” Dr. Muniswamy said in a statement. “A drug that can reduce the risk of cardiometabolic diseases such as heart attack and stroke, and also reduce the incidence of liver cancer, which can follow fatty liver disease, will make a huge impact.”
The study authors vowed to continue CPACC’s development and are expecting funding from the NIH as a patent application pends. Clinical trials could even begin as soon as six months to a year, according to local outlet My San Antonio.
However, Madaris told The Post that there are more trials to be completed with rodents first, as they attempt to develop an oral version – or a pill – of the drug.