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Liraglutide repairs the infarcted heart: The role of the SIRT1/Parkin/mitophagy pathway.

Mol Med Rep · 2018

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on heart repair after a heart attack, giving liraglutide for about 28 days reduced heart tissue scarring, inflammation, and cell death. Lab tests showed liraglutide protected heart cells’ energy-producing parts (mitochondria) from damage and helped balance harmful stress in these cells.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalMol Med Rep, 2018
Citations77
Relative citation ratio3.34
NIH percentile86
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Heart Failure

Abstract

Liraglutide is glucagon‑like peptide‑1 receptor agonist used for treating patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. The present study aimed to investigate the role and mechanism of liraglutide in repairing the infarcted heart following myocardial infarction. The results of the present study demonstrated that amplification of the dose of liraglutide for ~28 days was able to reduce cardiac fibrosis, inflammatory responses and myocardial death in the post‑infarcted heart. In vitro, liraglutide protected cardiomyocyte mitochondria against the chronic hypoxic damage, inhibiting the mitochondrial apoptosis pathways. Mechanistically, liraglutide elevated the expression of NAD‑dependent protein deacetylase sirtuin‑1 (SIRT1), which increased the expression of Parkin, leading to mitophagy activation. Protective mitophagy reversed cellular adenosine 5'‑triphosphate production, reduced cellular oxidative stress and balanced the redox response, sustaining mitochondrial homeostasis. Notably, following blockade of glucagon‑like peptide 1 receptor or knockdown of Parkin, the beneficial effects of liraglutide on mitochondria disappeared. In conclusion, the results of the present study illustrated the protective role of liraglutide in repairing the infarcted heart via regulation of the SIRT1/Parkin/mitophagy pathway.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 29328405 ↗

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