Exendin-4 attenuates adverse cardiac remodelling in streptozocin-induced diabetes via specific actions on infiltrating macrophages.
Basic Res Cardiol · 2016
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study on diabetic mice, the GLP-1 drug exendin-4 improved blood sugar control and reduced heart damage compared to insulin or no treatment. After 12 weeks, exendin-4 lowered heart stiffness and scarring, while also decreasing early inflammation by reducing a type of immune cell in the heart at 4 weeks. Lab tests showed exendin-4 also blocked harmful signals between immune cells and heart cells that contribute to damage.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Basic Res Cardiol, 2016 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 60 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.33 |
| NIH percentile | 78 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Heart Failure |
Abstract
In addition to its' established metabolic and cardioprotective effects, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) reduces post-infarction heart failure via preferential actions on the extracellular matrix (ECM). Here, we investigated whether the GLP-1 mimetic, exendin-4, modulates cardiac remodelling in experimental diabetes by specifically targeting inflammatory/ECM pathways, which are characteristically dysregulated in this setting. Adult mice were subjected to streptozotocin (STZ) diabetes and infused with exendin-4/insulin/saline from 0 to 4 or 4-12 weeks. Exendin-4 and insulin improved metabolic parameters in diabetic mice after 12 weeks, but only exendin-4 reduced cardiac diastolic dysfunction and interstitial fibrosis in parallel with altered ECM gene expression. Whilst myocardial inflammation was not evident at 12 weeks, CD11b-F4/80(++) macrophage infiltration at 4 weeks was increased and reduced by exendin-4, together with an improved cytokine profile. Notably, media collected from high glucose-treated macrophages induced cardiac fibroblast differentiation, which was prevented by exendin-4, whilst several cytokines/chemokines were differentially expressed/secreted by exendin-4-treated macrophages, some of which were modulated in STZ exendin-4-treated hearts. Our findings suggest that exendin-4 preferentially protects against ECM remodelling and diastolic dysfunction in experimental diabetes via glucose-dependent modulation of paracrine communication between infiltrating macrophages and resident fibroblasts, thereby indicating that cell-specific targeting of GLP-1 signalling may be a viable therapeutic strategy in this setting.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 26597728 ↗