Exendin-4 protects mitochondria from reactive oxygen species induced apoptosis in pancreatic Beta cells.
PLoS One · 2013
Last updated 2026-05-28In lab tests on mouse pancreatic cells, adding 100 µmol/l of Exendin-4 for 48 hours reduced cell death caused by oxidative stress by about 50% compared to untreated cells. The treatment also lowered mitochondrial damage and the release of harmful proteins, while increasing activity of an enzyme called Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A2.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | PLoS One, 2013 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 26 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.93 |
| NIH percentile | 48 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Mitochondrial oxidative stress is the basis for pancreatic β-cell apoptosis and a common pathway for numerous types of damage, including glucotoxicity and lipotoxicity. We cultivated mice pancreatic β-cell tumor Min6 cell lines in vitro and observed pancreatic β-cell apoptosis and changes in mitochondrial function before and after the addition of Exendin-4. Based on these observations, we discuss the protective role of Exendin-4 against mitochondrial oxidative damage and its relationship with Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A2.
METHODS: We established a pancreatic β-cell oxidative stress damage model using Min6 cell lines cultured in vitro with tert-buty1 hydroperoxide and hydrogen peroxide. We then added Exendin-4 to observe changes in the rate of cell apoptosis (Annexin-V-FITC-PI staining flow cytometry and DNA ladder). We detected the activity of the caspase 3 and 8 apoptotic factors, measured the mitochondrial membrane potential losses and reactive oxygen species production levels, and detected the expression of cytochrome c and Smac/DLAMO in the cytosol and mitochondria, mitochondrial Ca2-independent phospholipase A2 and Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A2 mRNA.
RESULTS: The time-concentration curve showed that different percentages of apoptosis occurred at different time-concentrations in tert-buty1 hydroperoxide- and hydrogen peroxide-induced Min6 cells. Incubation with 100 µmol/l of Exendin-4 for 48 hours reduced the Min6 cell apoptosis rate (p<0.05). The mitochondrial membrane potential loss and total reactive oxygen species levels decreased (p<0.05), and the release of cytochrome c and Smac/DLAMO from the mitochondria was reduced. The study also showed that Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A2 activity was positively related to Exendin-4 activity.
CONCLUSION: Exendin-4 reduces Min6 cell oxidative damage and the cell apoptosis rate, which may be related to Ca(2)-independent phospholipase A2.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24204601 ↗