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Exendin-4 attenuates adverse cardiac remodelling in streptozocin-induced diabetes via specific actions on infiltrating macrophages.

Basic Res Cardiol · 2016

Last updated 2026-05-28

In 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.

JournalBasic Res Cardiol, 2016
Citations60
Relative citation ratio2.33
NIH percentile78
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 ↗