Journal of Lipid Research (Jul 2023)
Geranylgeranoic acid, a bioactive and endogenous fatty acid in mammals: a review
Abstract
Geranylgeranoic acid (GGA) was first reported in 1983 as one of the mevalonic acid metabolites, but its biological significance was not studied for a long time. Our research on the antitumor effects of retinoids led us to GGA, one of the acyclic retinoids that induce cell death in human hepatoma-derived cell lines. We were able to demonstrate the presence of endogenous GGA in various tissues of male rats, including the liver, testis, and cerebrum, by LC-MS/MS. Furthermore, the biosynthesis of GGA from mevalonic acid in mammals including humans was confirmed by isotopomer spectral analysis using 13C-labeled mevalonolactone and cultured hepatoma cells, and the involvement of hepatic monoamine oxidase B in the biosynthesis of GGA was also demonstrated. The biological activity of GGA was analyzed from the retinoid (differentiation induction) and nonretinoid (cell death induction) aspects, and in particular, the nonretinoid mechanism by which GGA induces cell death in hepatoma cells was found to involve pyroptosis via ER stress responses initiated by TLR4 signaling. In addition to these effects of GGA, we also describe the in vivo effects of GGA on reproduction. In this review, based mainly on our published papers, we have shown that hepatic monoamine oxidase B is involved in the biosynthesis of GGA and that GGA induces cell death in human hepatoma-derived cell lines by noncanonical pyroptosis, one of the mechanisms of sterile inflammatory cell death.