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Oleic acid and glucose regulate glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor expression in a rat pancreatic ductal cell line.

Toxicol Appl Pharmacol · 2012

Last updated 2026-05-28

In lab tests using rat pancreatic cells, a high-fat, high-calorie environment with oleic acid reduced the activity of a key protein (GLP1R) involved in blood sugar control. This effect was seen in ductal cells, where glucose further decreased GLP1R levels. The changes were partially reversed by certain inhibitors, suggesting the high-fat environment may disrupt how these cells respond to GLP-1 drugs.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalToxicol Appl Pharmacol, 2012
Citations4
Relative citation ratio0.15
NIH percentile10
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

The glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor (GLP1R) plays a critical role in glucose metabolism and has become an important target for a growing class of drugs designed to treat type 2 diabetes. In vitro studies were designed to investigate the effect of the GLP1R agonist, exenatide (Ex4), in "on-target" RIN-5mF (islet) cells as well as in "off-target" AR42J (acinar) and DSL-6A/C1 (ductal) cells in a diabetic environment. Ex4 increased islet cell proliferation but did not affect acinar cells or ductal cells at relevant concentrations. A high caloric, high fat diet is a risk factor for impaired glucose tolerance and type-2 diabetes. An in vitro Oleic acid (OA) model was used to investigate the effect of Ex4 in a high calorie, high fat environment. At 0.1 and 0.4mM, OA mildly decreased the proliferation of all pancreatic cell types. Ex4 did not potentiate the inhibitory effect of OA on cell proliferation. Akt phosphorylation in response to Ex4 was diminished in OA-treated ductal cells. GLP1R protein detected by western blot was time and concentration dependently decreased after glucose stimulation in OA-treated ductal cells. In ductal cells, OA treatment altered the intracellular localization of GLP1R and its co-localization with early endosome and recycling endosomes. Chloroquine (lysosomal inhibitor), N-acetyl-l-cysteine (reactive oxygen species scavenger) and wortmannin (a phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase inhibitor), fully or partially, rescued GLP1R protein in OA-pretreated, glucose-stimulated ductal cells. The impact of altered regulation on phenotype/function is presently unknown. However, these data suggest that GLP1R regulation in ductal cells can be altered by a high fat, high calorie environment.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22925809 ↗