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Restoration of cerebral and systemic microvascular architecture in APP/PS1 transgenic mice following treatment with Liraglutide™.

Microcirculation · 2015

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on mice, those given Liraglutide for eight weeks showed improvements in blood vessel structure in the brain, spleen, and kidneys compared to untreated mice. Specifically, Liraglutide reduced the number of brain microaneurysms and leakage, restored kidney blood vessel shape, and increased the density of spleen blood vessels. The untreated mice had irregular blood vessels in these organs, while the treated mice had more normal-looking structures.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalMicrocirculation, 2015
Citations41
Relative citation ratio1.59
NIH percentile66
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Alzheimers

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Cerebral microvascular impairments occurring in AD may reduce Aβ peptide clearance and impact upon circulatory ultrastructure and function. We hypothesized that microvascular pathologies occur in organs responsible for systemic Aβ peptide clearance in a model of AD and that Liraglutide (Victoza(®)) improves vessel architecture. METHODS: Seven-month-old APP/PS1 and age-matched wild-type mice received once-daily intraperitoneal injections of either Liraglutide or saline (n = 4 per group) for eight weeks. Casts of cerebral, splenic, hepatic, and renal microanatomy were analyzed using SEM. RESULTS: Casts from wild-type mice showed regularly spaced microvasculature with smooth lumenal profiles, whereas APP/PS1 mice revealed evidence of microangiopathies including cerebral microanuerysms, intracerebral microvascular leakage, extravasation from renal glomerular microvessels, and significant reductions in both splenic sinus density (p = 0.0286) and intussusceptive microvascular pillars (p = 0.0412). Quantification of hepatic vascular ultrastructure in APP/PS1 mice revealed that vessel parameters (width, length, branching points, intussusceptive pillars and microaneurysms) were not significantly different from wild-type mice. Systemic administration of Liraglutide reduced the incidence of cerebral microanuerysms and leakage, restored renal microvascular architecture and significantly increased both splenic venous sinus number (p = 0.0286) and intussusceptive pillar formation (p = 0.0129). CONCLUSION: Liraglutide restores cerebral, splenic, and renal architecture in APP/PS1 mice.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 25556713 ↗

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