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Role of glucagon-like peptide- 1 in vascular endothelial dysfunction.

Indian J Exp Biol · 2010

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a rat study, the GLP-1 drug exendin-4 (1 microgram per kilogram) improved blood vessel function damaged by diabetes and high homocysteine levels. It reduced high blood sugar and homocysteine levels, restored blood vessel relaxation responses, and lowered oxidative stress markers, though levels did not return to normal. The benefits were blocked by a nitric oxide inhibitor, suggesting exendin-4 works by activating nitric oxide pathways.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalIndian J Exp Biol, 2010
Citations13
Relative citation ratio0.39
NIH percentile24
Molecules
Conditions studied Cardiovascular Risk Reduction

Abstract

The present study has been undertaken to investigate the effect of exendin-4 (a glucagon-like peptide-1 agonist) in diabetes mellitus (DM) and hyperhomocysteinemia (HHcy)-induced vascular endothelial dysfunction (VED). Streptozotocin (55 mg kg-1, iv, once) and methionine (1.7% w/w, po, 4 weeks) were administered to rats to produce DM (serum glucose >200 mg d1-1) and HHcy (serum homocysteine >10 microM) respectively. VED was assessed using isolated aortic ring preparation, microscopy of thoracic aorta, and serum nitrite/nitrate concentration. Serum TBARS concentration was estimated to assess oxidative stress. Atorvastatin has been employed as standard agent. Exendin-4 (1 microg kg-1, ip) and atorvastatin (30 mg kg-1, po) treatments significantly attenuated increase in serum glucose and homocysteine but their concentrations remained markedly higher than sham control value. Exendin-4 and atorvastatin treatments markedly prevented DM and HHcy-induced (i) attenuation of acetylcholine-induced endothelium-dependent relaxation, (ii) impairment of vascular endothelial lining, (iii) decrease in serum nitrite/nitrate concentration, and (iv) increase in serum TBARS. However, this ameliorative effect of exendin-4 has been prevented by L-NAME (25 mg kg-1, ip), an inhibitor of NOS. It may be concluded that exendin-4 may activate eNOS due to activation of GLP-1 and consequently reduce oxidative stress to improve vascular endothelial dysfunction.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 20358868 ↗