Exendin-4 reduces glycemia by increasing liver glucokinase activity: an insulin independent effect.
Pharmacol Rep · 2012
Last updated 2026-05-28In mice with diabetes, the drug exendin-4 increased liver activity of an enzyme called glucokinase, which helps control blood sugar, without relying on insulin. This effect was blocked when a GLP-1 receptor blocker was used, suggesting the liver response is linked to GLP-1 receptors. The improvement in liver function was seen even when blood insulin levels did not change.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Pharmacol Rep, 2012 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 28 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.95 |
| NIH percentile | 49 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
Exendin-4 is a stable peptide agonist of GLP-1 receptor that exhibits insulinotropic actions. Some in vivo studies indicated insulin-independent glucoregulatory actions of exendin-4. That finding prompted us to evaluate effects of exendin-4 on liver glucose metabolism. Acute and chronic treatment of exendin-4 resulted in increased hepatic glucokinase activity in db/db mice but not in lean C57 mice. The stimulatory effect of exendin-4 on glucokinase activity was abrogated by exendin 9-39, a GLP-1 antagonist. Exposure of hepatocytes isolated from db/db mice to exendin-4 elicited a rapid increase in cAMP, which was synergized by IBMX, an inhibitor of cAMP degradation. The GLP-1 antagonist, exendin 9-39, has abolished the cAMP generating effects of exendin-4 as well. Furthermore, chronic treatment of exendin-4 in streptozotocin-treated C57 mice resulted in restoration of hepatic glycogen, an indicator of improved glucose metabolism, without apparent changes in serum insulin levels. In conclusion, exendin-4 increased glucokinase enzyme protein and activity in liver via a mechanism parallel to and independent of insulin. Exendin-4-induced increase in hepatic glucokinase activity is more pronounced in the presence of hepatic insulin resistance. This beneficial effect of exendin-4 on liver glucokinase activity may be mediated by GLP-1 receptor.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22580530 ↗