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Pancreas and liver uptake of new radiolabeled incretins (GLP-1 and Exendin-4) in models of diet-induced and diet-restricted obesity.

Nucl Med Biol · 2017

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of mice, researchers found that diet-induced obesity significantly reduced uptake of two incretin-based drugs (GLP-1 and Exendin-4) in the liver and pancreas, similar to levels seen in diabetic mice. Mice on a diet-restricted plan showed some improvement in blood sugar control (fasting blood glucose dropped from 234.3±66.7 mg/dl to 96.6±9.3 mg/dl), but their drug uptake did not fully return to normal. The Exendin-4-based drug performed better than the GLP-1-based one in tracking uptake.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNucl Med Biol, 2017
Citations3
Relative citation ratio0.11
NIH percentile8
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Radiolabeled GLP-1 and its analog Exendin-4, have been employed in diabetes and insulinoma. No protocol in conventional Diet-Induced Obesity (DIO), and Diet-Restricted Obesity (DRO), has been identified. Aiming to assess pancreatic beta cell uptake in DIO and DRO, a protocol was designed. METHODS: GLP-1-βAla-HYNIC and HYNIC-βAla-Exendin-4 were labeled with technetium-99m. Four Swiss mouse models were adopted: Controls (C), Alloxan Diabetes Controls (ADC), DIO and DRO. Biodistribution and ex-vivo planar imaging were documented. RESULTS: Radiolabeling yield was in the range of 97% and both agents were hydrophilic. Fasting Blood Glucose (FBG) was 79.2±8.2mg/dl in C, 590.4±23.3mg/dl in ADC, 234.3±66.7mg/dl in DIO, and 96.6±9.3 in DRO (p=0.010). Biodistribution confirmed predominantly urinary excretion. DIO mice exhibited depressed uptake in liver and pancreas, for both radiomarkers, in the range of ADC. DRO only partially restored such values. Tc-HYNIC-βAla-Exendin-4 demonstrated better results than GLP-1-βAla-HYNIC-Tc. CONCLUSIONS: 1) Diet-induced obesity remarkably depressed beta cell uptake; 2) Restriction of obesity failed to normalize uptake, despite robust improvement of FBG; 3) HYNIC-βAla-Exendin-4 was the most useful marker; 4) Further studies are recommended in obesity and dieting, including bariatric surgery.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 28365524 ↗