Obese mice weight loss role on nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and endoplasmic reticulum stress treated by a GLP-1 receptor agonist.
Int J Obes (Lond) · 2022
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of obese mice, the GLP-1 drug Semaglutide (40 µg/kg) led to weight loss and improved blood sugar control, insulin resistance, and liver fat buildup. Some benefits, like reduced liver inflammation and stress, were linked to Semaglutide itself, while others, such as lower liver fat, required both the drug and weight loss. Out of 14 genes tested, 13 were affected by Semaglutide, and 93% showed changes with either the drug or a combination of the drug and diet.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Int J Obes (Lond), 2022 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 55 |
| Relative citation ratio | 5.05 |
| NIH percentile | 92 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Obesity, Mash |
Abstract
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: The weight loss following Semaglutide treatment, a GLP-1 receptor agonist, might be responsible for some effects observed on the nonalcoholic fatty liver disease of obese mice.
SUBJECTS/METHODS: Two groups of C57BL/6 male mice (n = 30/group) were fed the diets Control (C) or high-fat (HF) for 16 weeks. Then, separated into six new groups for an additional four weeks (n = 10/group) and treated with Semaglutide (S, 40 µg/kg) or paired feeding (PF) with S groups (C; C-S; C-PF; HF; HF-S; HF-PF).
RESULTS: Semaglutide reduced energy consumption leading to weight loss. Simultaneously it improved glucose intolerance, glycated hemoglobin, insulin resistance/sensitivity, plasma lipids, and gastric inhibitory polypeptide. Semaglutide and paired feeding mitigated liver steatosis and adipose differentiation-related protein (Plin2) expression. Semaglutide also improved hormones and adipokines, reduced lipogenesis and inflammation, and increased beta-oxidation. Semaglutide lessened liver glucose uptake and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. Among the 14 genes analyzed, 13 were modified by Semaglutide (93 %, six genes were changed exclusively by Semaglutide, and seven other genes were affected by the combination of Semaglutide and paired feeding). In seven genes, the paired diet showed no effect (50% of the genes tested). No marker was affected exclusively by paired feeding.
CONCLUSIONS: Semaglutide and the consequent weight loss reduced obese mice liver inflammation, insulin resistance, and ER stress. However, weight loss alone did show few or no action on some significant study findings, like liver steatosis, leptin, insulin, resistin, and amylin. Furthermore, hepatic inflammation mediated by MCP-1 and partially by TNF-alpha and IL6 were also not reduced by weight loss. Furthermore, weight loss alone did not lessen hepatic lipogenesis as determined by the findings of SREBP-1c, CHREBP, PPAR-alpha, and SIRT1. Semaglutide was implicated in improving glucose uptake and lessening ER stress by reducing GADD45, independent of weight loss.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 34465857 ↗