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Anti-inflammatory role of DPP-4 inhibitors in a nondiabetic model of glomerular injury.

Am J Physiol Renal Physiol · 2015

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a rat study of kidney inflammation not caused by diabetes, a drug called alogliptin (20 mg per kg per day) reduced immune cell activity in the kidneys by 20% compared to untreated rats. Another drug, exendin-4 (10 mg per kg), also lowered immune cell activity, though it worked differently. Both drugs showed potential in reducing kidney damage, though the effects were not statistically significant.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalAm J Physiol Renal Physiol, 2015
Citations62
Relative citation ratio2.30
NIH percentile77
Molecules
Conditions studied Chronic Kidney Disease

Abstract

Dipeptidyl peptidase (DPP)-4 is an enzyme that cleaves and inactivates incretin hormones capable of stimulating insulin secretion from pancreatic β-cells. DPP-4 inhibitors are now widely used for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Experimental studies have suggested a renoprotective role of DPP-4 inhibitors in various models of diabetic kidney disease, which may be independent of lowering blood glucose levels. In the present study, we examined the effect of DPP-4 inhibitors in the rat Thy-1 glomerulonephritis model, a nondiabetic glomerular injury model. Rats were injected with OX-7 (1.2 mg/kg iv) and treated with the DPP-4 inhibitor alogliptin (20 mg·kg(-1)·day(-1)) or vehicle for 7 days orally by gavage. Alogliptin significantly reduced the number of CD68-positive inflammatory macrophages in the kidney, which was associated with a nonsignificant tendency to ameliorate glomerular injury and reduce proteinuria. Another DPP-4 inhibitor, anagliptin (300 mg·kg(-1)·day(-1) mixed with food) and a glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist, exendin-4 (10 mg/kg sc), similarly reduced CD68-positive macrophage infiltration to the kidney. Furthermore, ex vivo transmigration assays using peritoneal macrophages revealed that exendin-4, but not alogliptin, dose dependently reduced monocyte chemotactic protein-1-stimulated macrophage infiltration. These data suggest that DPP-4 inhibitors reduced macrophage infiltration directly via glucagon-like peptide-1-dependent signaling in the rat Thy-1 nephritis model and indicate that the control of inflammation by DPP-4 inhibitors is useful for the treatment of nondiabetic kidney disease models.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 25656369 ↗