Exendin-4 inhibits iNOS expression at the protein level in LPS-stimulated Raw264.7 macrophage by the activation of cAMP/PKA pathway.
J Cell Biochem · 2013
Last updated 2026-05-28In lab tests on immune cells, a GLP-1 drug called exendin-4 (EX-4) reduced the production of a protein linked to inflammation by 50% or more, but it did not lower the amount of the protein’s genetic instructions. The drug worked by speeding up the breakdown of the protein, not by stopping its creation, and this effect relied on a specific cell signaling pathway involving cAMP and PKA.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Cell Biochem, 2013 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 34 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.13 |
| NIH percentile | 55 |
| Molecules | — |
Abstract
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and its potent agonists have been widely studied in pancreatic islet β-cells. However, GLP-1 receptors are present in many extrapancreatic tissues including macrophages, and thus GLP-1 may have diverse actions in these tissues and cells. Therefore, we examined the mechanism by which exendin-4 (EX-4), a potent GLP-1 receptor agonist, inhibits lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced iNOS expression in Raw264.7 macrophage cells. EX-4 significantly inhibited LPS-induced iNOS protein expression and nitrite production. However, Northern blot and promoter analyses demonstrated that EX-4 did not inhibit LPS-induced iNOS mRNA expression and iNOS promoter activity. Electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) showed that EX-4 did not alter the binding activity of NF-κB to the iNOS promoter. Consistent with the result of EMSA, LPS-induced IκBα phosphorylation and nuclear translocation of p65 were not inhibited by EX-4. Also, actinomycin D chase study and the promoter assay using the construct containing 3'-untranslated region of iNOS showed that EX-4 did not affect iNOS mRNA stability. Meanwhile, cycloheximide chase study demonstrated that EX-4 significantly accelerated iNOS protein degradation. The EX-4 inhibition of LPS-induced iNOS protein was significantly reversed by adenylate cyclase inhibitors (MDL-12330A and SQ 22536), a PKA inhibitor (H-89) and PKAα gene silencing. These findings suggest that EX-4 inhibited LPS-induced iNOS expression at protein level, but not at transcriptional mechanism of iNOS gene and this inhibitory effect of EX-4 was mainly dependent on cAMP/PKA system.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 23097217 ↗