People Are Still Working on the Senolytic Peptide FOXO4-DRI
The peptide industry has been growing for some years now, becoming more vocal and visible. It occupies a similar space to the supplement industry, and seems likely to provoke many of the same battles with regulators such as the FDA. Peptide use is characterized by the same lack of rigorous supporting data that attends supplement use, and for many of the same reasons. The lines in the sand dividing peptide from drug are just as arbitrary as those dividing supplement and drug, and just as driven by funding and the high cost of regulatory compliance. Peptides that can be effectively monopolized via intellectual property become drug candidates, as only with that monopoly is it possible to raise enough funding to engage with regulators and run clinical trials. Peptides that cannot remain on the outside, without the robust human data needed to support greater interest.
Against the background of this broader context of a growing market for the use of peptides, you might recall that the peptide FOXO4-DRI was one of the early potential senolytic therapies to be validated in animal studies, back in the mid-2010s. FOXO4-DRI interferes in the interaction between FOXO4 and p53 that normally inhibits apoptosis of senescent cells, and thus results in the selective destruction of senescent cells with very little impact on other cells. Clearance of senescent cells is well demonstrated to improve health in aged animal models, but only relatively small clinical trials of a few senolytic small molecules have yet taken place to validate use in humans.
A company, Cleara Biotech, was formed to commercialize the early academic work on FOXO4-DRI, and appears to still be a going preclinical concern focused more on the FOXO4-p53 interaction than on FOXO4-DRI per se. Other groups have since become involved, such as Numeric Biotech, and it has long been the case that anyone so minded can just up and buy FOXO4-DRI for personal use from any number of peptide sellers. It is unclear as how many people are choosing to do that, and certainly we'll never see any sort of useful data resulting from that use. Meanwhile, academic research groups continue to work with FOXO4-DRI as a tool to explore the FOXO4-p53 interaction in the context of cellular senescence as a driver of degenerative aging.
FOXO4-DRI regulates endothelial cell senescence via the P53 signaling pathway
Endothelial cell dysfunction during aging is a key driver of vascular aging and related diseases; however, effective strategies to selectively eliminate senescent endothelial cells and restore vascular function remain lacking. FOXO4-DRI, a novel peptide-based intervention, specifically disrupts the interaction between FOXO4 and P53, thereby inducing apoptosis in senescent cells. This study innovatively focuses on the mechanism by which FOXO4-DRI induces apoptosis in senescent endothelial cells, demonstrating that it functions by activating the p53/BCL-2/Caspase-3 signaling pathway to promote selective apoptosis of these cells. FOXO4-DRI significantly improves vascular function and delays vascular aging.
This study aims to analyze the vascular function and aging status of the aorta in naturally aged mice and progeroid model mice following FOXO4-DRI injection. Additionally, it investigates changes in endothelial cell function in senescent endothelial cells induced by oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD), as well as the protein expression and interaction in the FOXO4-P53 signaling pathway. To assess the impact of FOXO4-DRI on endothelial cell senescence, the senescent endothelial cells were treated with FOXO4-DRI, followed by immunofluorescence and Western blotting experiments.
Injection of FOXO4-DRI in both naturally aged and induced aging mice effectively suppressed aortic aging and improved aortic function. Additionally, we found that FOXO4-DRI alleviates endothelial cell senescence induced by OGD, thereby enhancing endothelial cell function. Through co-immunoprecipitation (CO-IP) experiments, we discovered that FOXO4-DRI prevents the binding of FOXO4 to P53, facilitating the phosphorylated P53 nuclear exclusion, which subsequently trigger BAX and cleaved caspase-3, leading to the apoptosis of senescent cells. Ultimately, this mechanism achieves the goal of inhibiting vascular aging.