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Liraglutide Promotes Cortical Neurite Outgrowth via the MEK-ERK Pathway.

Cell Mol Neurobiol · 2015

Last updated 2026-05-28

In lab tests, the GLP-1 drug liraglutide increased the growth of nerve fibers (neurites) in brain cells in a dose-dependent way, with higher doses producing more growth. This effect was partly blocked when researchers added a chemical that inhibits the MEK-ERK pathway, suggesting liraglutide works through this signaling route.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalCell Mol Neurobiol, 2015
Citations22
Relative citation ratio0.92
NIH percentile47
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Alzheimers

Abstract

Liraglutide is the glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) synthetic form which has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration to be released onto the market. The metabolic benefits of incretin hormone as an anti-diabetic agent are widely recognized, but its potential extra-pancreatic effects of GLP-1 analog (liraglutide) in the central nerve system are less well known. To this purpose, we used immunofluorescence method to examine the effect of liraglutide on neurite outgrowth in primary cortical neuron culture by measuring neurite length and confirmed the promotion effect. Then, we investigated the potential mechanisms and found that liraglutide promoted neurite outgrowth in a dose-dependant manner, and this effect could be partially inhibited by MEK-ERK inhibitor U0126. Besides, liraglutide induced an increase of p-ERK/ERK expression, which could be blocked in the presence of U0126. Similarly, phosphorylated transcription factor (p-CREB) level shared the same trend with p-ERK/ERK ratio after liraglutide treatment. Collectively, our data illustrated that that liraglutide exerts neurotrophin-like activity partly via MEK-ERK pathway, which might offer a novel idea for treatment of axon-associated neurological diseases.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 25862329 ↗

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