GLP-1 improves adipose tissue glyoxalase activity and capillarization improving insulin sensitivity in type 2 diabetes.
Pharmacol Res · 2020
Last updated 2026-05-28A study found that people with obesity and type 2 diabetes had lower activity of an enzyme called glyoxalase-1 (GLO-1) in their fat tissue, which was linked to worse blood sugar control. In rats with diabetes, treatments with GLP-1 (either through surgery or the drug Liraglutide) increased GLO-1 activity, improved fat tissue blood vessel growth, and enhanced insulin signaling.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Pharmacol Res, 2020 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 33 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.83 |
| NIH percentile | 71 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity |
Abstract
Methylglyoxal was shown to impair adipose tissue capillarization and insulin sensitivity in obese models. We hypothesized that glyoxalase-1 (GLO-1) activity could be diminished in the adipose tissue of type 2 diabetic obese patients. Moreover, we assessed whether such activity could be increased by GLP-1-based therapies in order to improve adipose tissue capillarization and insulin sensitivity. GLO-1 activity was assessed in visceral adipose tissue of a cohort of obese patients. The role of GLP-1 in modulating GLO-1 was assessed in type 2 diabetic GK rats submitted to sleeve gastrectomy or Liraglutide treatment, in the adipose tissue angiogenesis assay and in the HUVEC cell line. Glyoxalase-1 activity was decreased in visceral adipose tissue of pre-diabetic and diabetic obese patients, together with other markers of adipose tissue dysfunction and correlated with increased HbA1c levels. Decreased adipose tissue GLO-1 levels in GK rats were increased by sleeve gastrectomy and Liraglutide, being associated with overexpression of angiogenic and vasoactive factors, as well as insulin receptor phosphorylation (Tyr1161). Moreover, GLP-1 increased adipose tissue capillarization and HUVEC proliferation in a glyoxalase-dependent manner. Lower adipose tissue GLO-1 activity was observed in dysmetabolic patients, being a target for GLP-1 in improving adipose tissue capillarization and insulin sensitivity.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 32942016 ↗