Effects of Liraglutide and Fenretinide treatments on the diabetic phenotype of neuronal human BACE1 knock-in mice.
Biochem Pharmacol · 2019
Last updated 2026-05-28In a mouse study, two diabetes drugs—liraglutide and fenretinide—were tested for their effects on mice genetically modified to develop diabetes and Alzheimer’s-like symptoms. After 10 weeks of treatment, both drugs reduced body fat gain and lowered levels of certain blood fats (triglycerides with liraglutide and leptin with fenretinide), but neither improved blood sugar control. The drugs also normalized some liver-related changes linked to diabetes, though they did not affect the mice’s overall glucose metabolism.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Biochem Pharmacol, 2019 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 9 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.49 |
| NIH percentile | 29 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Alzheimers, Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
We recently reported that brain-specific human β-secretase 1 (BACE1) knock-in (PLB4), a mouse model of sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD), also develops a severe diabetic phenotype characterised by impaired glucose homeostasis, decreased insulin sensitivity and a fatty liver phenotype. Hence, we here aimed to assess if targeted anti-diabetic therapies (Liraglutide and Fenretinide) would attenuate the diabetic and behavioural phenotype of these mice. PLB4 mice and wild-type (WT) controls were administered Liraglutide or Fenretinide for ten consecutive weeks alongside vehicle-treated mice. Physiological (body weight and mass composition, glucose tolerance, serum hormone concentration), behavioural (locomotor activity) and molecular assessments were performed in mice pre- and post-treatment. Liraglutide and Fenretinide treatments inhibited adiposity gain and decreased circulating serum triglyceride (with Liraglutide) and leptin (with Fenretinide) levels in PLB4 mice. We also found that PLB4 mice exhibited increased levels of serum dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP4), together with up-regulated hepatic expression of Dpp4, retinol binding protein 4 (Rbp4) and sterol regulatory element-binding 1c (Srebp1c), which was normalised by both treatments. Interestingly, Liraglutide treatment slowed down habituation to a novel environment and increased secondary night activity peak in WT mice, suggesting an impact on circadian activity regulation. However, neither treatment improved glucose homeostasis in PLB4 mice, implying that impaired glucose metabolism in this genotype may not be associated with glucagon like peptide 1 (GLP-1) and/or RBP4-mediated pathways. In summary, this study provides new insights into molecular mechanisms underlying neuronal BACE1-mediated metabolic regulation and implicates BACE1 as a putative regulator of systemic DPP4 levels.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 31103416 ↗
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