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Exenatide substantially improves proinsulin conversion and cell survival that augment Ins2<sup>+/Akita</sup> beta cell function.

Mol Cell Endocrinol · 2017

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on diabetic mice, the drug exenatide improved insulin production and blood sugar control by increasing the conversion of proinsulin to insulin. After 15 or 120 minutes of treatment, exenatide boosted insulin secretion and reduced the ratio of proinsulin to insulin, with the 120-minute effect linked to calcium and cAMP-dependent pathways. Longer treatment also improved cell survival and glucose tolerance in the mice.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalMol Cell Endocrinol, 2017
Citations1
Relative citation ratio0.04
NIH percentile4
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Proinsulin folding imperfections cause extensive beta-cell defects known in diabetes. Here, we investigated whether exenatide can alleviate such defects in proinsulin conversion, beta-cell survival, and insulin secretion, in the Ins2 beta-cells that have a spontaneous mutation (Cys 96 Tyr) in the insulin 2 gene caused dominant negative misfolding problem. 15 or 120 min exenatide administration substantially improves glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, marked in the secreted insulin levels and proinsulin/insulin ratio. This improvement is mainly due to enhanced conversion of proinsulin to insulin, having nothing to do with the prohormone convertase PC1/3 and PC2 levels. The 15 min improvement is calcium-independent. The 120 min improvement is linked to calcium and/or cAMP dependent mechanisms. This efficacy is validated during longer treatment and in Akita islets. Exenatide improves Ins2 beta-cell survival and Akita mouse's glucose tolerance. The results suggest a potential of incretin mimetics in alleviating defective proinsulin conversion and other proinsulin misfolding consequences.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27658750 ↗

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