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Mast Cell and M1 Macrophage Infiltration and Local Pro-Inflammatory Factors Were Attenuated with Incretin-Based Therapies in Obesity-Related Glomerulopathy.

Metab Syndr Relat Disord · 2017

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on rats with obesity-related kidney disease, two diabetes drugs—vildagliptin (3 mg/kg/day) and liraglutide (200 µg/kg twice daily)—reduced kidney damage after 8 weeks of treatment. The drugs lowered body weight gain, improved insulin sensitivity, and decreased kidney inflammation by reducing the presence of pro-inflammatory cells (mast cells and M1 macrophages) and lowering levels of inflammatory markers TNF-α and IL-6. However, another marker, TGF-β1, remained unchanged.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalMetab Syndr Relat Disord, 2017
Citations29
Relative citation ratio1.22
NIH percentile57
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity, Chronic Kidney Disease

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The global increase of obesity parallels the obesity-related glomerulopathy (ORG) epidemic. Dipeptidyl peptidase 4 inhibitors and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists were well recognized to attenuate renal injury independent of glucose control in diabetic nephropathy. There are limited studies focusing on their effects on ORG. We explored the effects of incretin-based therapies on early ORG and the inflammatory responses involved mainly concentrated on mast cell (MC) and macrophage (M) infiltration and local pro-inflammatory factors. METHODS: ORG rat models were induced by high-fat diet and then divided into ORG vehicle, vildagliptin (3 mg/kg/day, qd) and liraglutide (200 μg/kg, bid) treated groups. After 8 weeks of treatments, albuminuria, glomerular histology, renal inflammatory cell infiltration, and pro-inflammatory factors were analyzed. RESULTS: Early ORG model was demonstrated by albuminuria, glomerulomegaly, foot process fusion, and mesangial and endothelial mild proliferation. Incretin-based therapies limited body weight gain and improved insulin sensitivity. ORG was alleviated, manifested by decreased average glomerular area, attenuated mesangial and endothelial cell proliferation, and revived cell-to-cell propagation of podocytes, which contributed to reduced albuminuria. Compared with ORG vehicle, MC and M1 macrophage (pro-inflammatory) infiltration and M1/M2 ratio were significantly decreased; M2 macrophage (anti-inflammatory) was not significantly increased after incretin-based treatments. Tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and IL-6 in renal cortex were significantly downregulated, while transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) remained unchanged. CONCLUSIONS: Incretin-based treatments could alleviate high-fat diet-induced ORG partly through the systemic insulin sensitivity improvement and the attenuated local inflammation, mainly by the decrease of MC and M1 macrophage infiltration and reduction of TNF-α and IL-6.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 28737448 ↗