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A glucagon-like peptide-1 analog reverses the molecular pathology and cardiac dysfunction of a mouse model of obesity.

Circulation · 2013

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a mouse study, a GLP-1 drug called liraglutide (30 µg/kg twice daily) improved heart function and reduced harmful changes in the heart—such as inflammation and insulin resistance—without causing weight loss. After one week of treatment, the drug reversed signs of heart stress and damage, including lower levels of a protein linked to inflammation and better energy processing in heart cells, compared to untreated obese mice.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalCirculation, 2013
Citations224
Relative citation ratio6.78
NIH percentile95
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cardiac consequences of obesity include inflammation, hypertrophy, and compromised energy metabolism. Glucagon-like peptide-1 is an incretin hormone capable of cytoprotective actions that reduces inflammation and endoplasmic reticulum stress in other tissues. Here we examine the cardiac effects of the glucagon-like peptide-1 analog liraglutide in a model of obesity, independent of changes in body weight. METHODS AND RESULTS: C57Bl6 mice were placed on a 45% high-fat diet (HFD) or a regular chow diet. Mice on HFD developed 46±2% and 60±2% greater body weight relative to regular chow diet-fed mice at 16 and 32 weeks, respectively (both P<0.0001), manifesting impaired glucose tolerance, insulin resistance, and cardiac ceramide accumulation by 16 weeks. One-week treatment with liraglutide (30 µg/kg twice daily) did not reduce body weight, but reversed insulin resistance, cardiac tumor necrosis factor-α expression, nuclear factor kappa B translocation, obesity-induced perturbations in cardiac endothelial nitric oxide synthase, connexin-43, and markers of hypertrophy and fibrosis, in comparison with placebo-treated HFD controls. Liraglutide improved the cardiac endoplasmic reticulum stress response and also improved cardiac function in animals on HFD by an AMP-activated protein kinase-dependent mechanism. Supporting a direct mechanism of action, liraglutide (100 nmol/L) prevented palmitate-induced lipotoxicity in isolated mouse cardiomyocytes and primary human coronary smooth muscle cells and prevented adhesion of human monocytes to tumor necrosis factor-α-activated human endothelial cells in vitro. CONCLUSIONS: Weight-neutral treatment with a glucagon-like peptide-1 analog activates several cardioprotective pathways, prevents HFD-induced insulin resistance and inflammation, reduces monocyte vascular adhesion, and improves cardiac function in vivo by activating AMP-activated protein kinase. These data support a role for glucagon-like peptide-1 analogs in limiting the cardiovascular risks of obesity.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 23186644 ↗