The effects of Exendin-4 on bone marrow-derived mesenchymal cells.
Endocrine · 2018
Last updated 2026-05-28In lab tests, the GLP-1 drug Exendin-4 (EXE) changed how human stem cells behave, pushing some cells to multiply and others to develop into fat or bone cells. EXE also increased fat breakdown in mature fat cells and boosted a protein that may reduce bone breakdown, suggesting it could support bone health.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Endocrine, 2018 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 13 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.54 |
| NIH percentile | 31 |
| Molecules | — |
Abstract
PURPOSE: GLP-1 receptor agonists are antidiabetic drugs currently used in the therapy of type 2 diabetes. Despite several in vitro and in vivo animal studies suggesting a beneficial effect of GLP-1 analogues on bone, in humans their skeletal effects are not clear and clinical studies report conflicting results.
METHODS: We differentiated human mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSC) toward the adipogenic and the osteoblastic lineages, analysing the effect of Exendin-4 (EXE) before, during and after specific differentiations.
RESULTS: We showed EXE ability to act selectively on a sub-population of hMSC characterised by a more stem potential, shifting them from G1 to S/M phase of cell cycle. We observed that EXE pre-treatment promotes both adipogenic and osteoblastic differentiations, possibly determined by an increased number of uncommitted progenitors. In fully differentiated cells, EXE affects mature adipocytes by increasing lipolysis, otherwise not altering osteoblasts metabolic activity. Moreover, the increased expression of osteoprotegerin, a modulator of the RANK/RANKL system, observed during osteogenic induction in presence of EXE, could negatively modulate osteoclastogenesis.
CONCLUSIONS: Our data suggest a complex action of EXE on bone, targeting the proliferation of mesenchymal progenitors, the metabolism of mature adipocytes and the modulation of osteoclastogenesis. Thus, an overall positive effect of this molecule on bone quality might be hypothesised.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 29094257 ↗