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Exendin-4 improves β-cell function in autophagy-deficient β-cells.

Endocrinology · 2013

Last updated 2026-05-28

In mice with diabetes and reduced autophagy in insulin-producing cells, the GLP-1 drug exendin-4 improved blood sugar control and glucose tolerance mainly by boosting insulin secretion. The drug also reduced cell death and increased cell growth in these mice, but it did not change the underlying autophagy levels in the cells.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalEndocrinology, 2013
Citations63
Relative citation ratio1.87
NIH percentile72
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Autophagy is cellular machinery for maintenance of β-cell function and mass. The implication of autophagy failure in β-cells on the pathophysiology of type 2 diabetes and its relation to the effect of treatment of diabetes remains elusive. Here, we found increased expression of p62 in islets of db/db mice and patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. Treatment with exendin-4, a glucagon like peptide-1 receptor agonist, improved glucose tolerance in db/db mice without significant changes in p62 expression in β-cells. Also in β-cell-specific Atg7-deficient mice, exendin-4 efficiently improved blood glucose level and glucose tolerance mainly by enhanced insulin secretion. In addition, we found that exendin-4 reduced apoptotic cell death and increased proliferating cells in the Atg7-deficient islets, and that exendin-4 counteracted thapsigargin-induced cell death of isolated islets augmented by autophagy deficiency. Our results suggest the potential involvement of reduced autophagy in β-cell dysfunction in type 2 diabetes. Without altering the autophagic state in β-cells, exendin-4 improves glucose tolerance associated with autophagy deficiency in β-cells. This is mainly achieved through augmentation of insulin secretion. In addition, exendin-4 prevents apoptosis and increases the proliferation of β-cells associated with autophagy deficiency, also without altering the autophagic machinery in β-cells.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24105478 ↗