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Liraglutide improves lipid and carbohydrate metabolism of ovariectomized rats.

Mol Cell Endocrinol · 2021

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on rats, removing estrogen (like in menopause) led to weight gain, more body fat, and higher fat in the liver. Giving the rats liraglutide—a GLP-1 drug—reversed these effects, reduced body fat, and improved how the body processed sugar and fat. The drug also boosted the fat-burning effects of adrenaline.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalMol Cell Endocrinol, 2021
Citations15
Relative citation ratio1.34
NIH percentile60
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

Considering that post-menopausal women and ovariectomized rodents develop obesity associated with increased visceral fat, this study was developed to investigate if liraglutide, a glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP1) analogue, could improve the metabolism of estrogen (E2) deficient females. Wistar rats were ovariectomized (OVX), and subdivided in four groups: sham saline, sham liraglutide, OVX saline, and OVX liraglutide. After sixty days, metabolic parameters of blood, heart, liver, brown (BAT) and white adipose tissue (WAT) visceral depots, and, heart oxidative homeostasis, were evaluated. Castration increased the animals' body weight, the relative weight of the WAT depots, hepatic triglycerides and cardiac glycogen content. Liraglutide treatment reversed these effects, decreased WAT depots weight and increased glucose oxidation and lipogenesis in BAT and WAT. In addition, liraglutide enhanced adrenalin (A) lipolytic effect. These results indicate that liraglutide may be a promising treatment to restore lipid homeostasis and prevent weight gain associated with E2 deficiency.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 33444670 ↗

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