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Liraglutide, a TFEB-Mediated Autophagy Agonist, Promotes the Viability of Random-Pattern Skin Flaps.

Oxid Med Cell Longev · 2021

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on skin flap surgery, liraglutide—a GLP-1 drug—improved the survival of skin flaps by increasing blood flow, reducing swelling, and promoting new blood vessel growth. The drug also decreased cell damage from oxidative stress and inflammation. These benefits were linked to liraglutide’s ability to boost autophagy (a cell-cleanup process) through activation of a protein called TFEB.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalOxid Med Cell Longev, 2021
Citations19
Relative citation ratio1.42
NIH percentile62
Molecules liraglutide

Abstract

Random skin flaps are commonly used in reconstruction surgery. However, distal necrosis of the skin flap remains a difficult problem in plastic surgery. Many studies have shown that activation of autophagy is an important means of maintaining cell homeostasis and can improve the survival rate of flaps. In the current study, we investigated whether liraglutide can promote the survival of random flaps by stimulating autophagy. Our results show that liraglutide can significantly improve flap viability, increase blood flow, and reduce tissue oedema. In addition, we demonstrated that liraglutide can stimulate angiogenesis and reduce pyroptosis and oxidative stress. Through immunohistochemistry analysis and Western blotting, we verified that liraglutide can enhance autophagy, while the 3-methylladenine- (3MA-) mediated inhibition of autophagy enhancement can significantly reduce the benefits of liraglutide described above. Mechanistically, we showed that the ability of liraglutide to enhance autophagy is mediated by the activation of transcription factor EB (TFEB) and its subsequent entry into the nucleus to activate autophagy genes, a phenomenon that may result from AMPK-MCOLN1-calcineurin signalling pathway activation. Taken together, our results show that liraglutide is an effective drug that can significantly improve the survival rate of random flaps by enhancing autophagy, inhibiting oxidative stress in tissues, reducing pyroptosis, and promoting angiogenesis, which may be due to the activation of TFEB via the AMPK-MCOLN1-calcineurin signalling pathway.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 33868571 ↗

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