Liraglutide, but not vildagliptin, restores normoglycaemia and insulin content in the animal model of type 2 diabetes, Psammomys obesus.
Regul Pept · 2010
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study on diabetic sand rats, liraglutide lowered blood sugar levels, normalizing them in all animals after six days and in 11 out of 17 after fourteen days. It also restored pancreatic insulin content to normal levels. Vildagliptin, even at doses that fully blocked DPP-IV activity, did not reduce blood sugar or change insulin content.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Regul Pept, 2010 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 12 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.32 |
| NIH percentile | 20 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
In order to investigate the effect and mechanism of liraglutide and vildagliptin in diabetic Psammomys obesus, we examined proliferation and apoptosis of beta-cells, beta-cell mass (BCM), and pancreatic insulin content after zero, six and fourteen days of treatment compared to control groups. One group of animals was kept on low-energy diet and seven groups were given high-energy diet (HED) that induced diabetes over a four week period. Non-fasting morning blood glucose, body weight, HbA(1C) and pancreatic insulin content were measured and beta cell mass (BCM), proliferation and apoptosis frequencies were determined using stereological point counting. Liraglutide significantly reduced blood glucose and even normalized it in all animals treated for six days and in 11 out of 17 animals treated for fourteen days. HED increased BCM and treatment with liraglutide did not change this. However, compared to the vehicle-treated animals pancreatic insulin content was normalized in animals treated for six and fourteen days with liraglutide. In contrast, vildagliptin, in doses causing full inhibition of plasma DPP-IV activity, neither reduced blood glucose nor altered HED-induced increases in BCM or pancreatic insulin content. These results suggest that liraglutide restores normoglycaemia and improves glycaemic control in P. obesus by increasing their insulin content and improving the function of the beta-cells. In contrast, vildagliptin does not improve glycaemic control in P. obesus nor affect beta-cell insulin content.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 20005262 ↗
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