GLPwatch

Antitumoral activity of liraglutide, a new DNMT inhibitor in breast cancer cells in vitro and in vivo.

Chem Biol Interact · 2021

Last updated 2026-05-28

In lab tests, the diabetes drug liraglutide reduced cancer cell growth, migration, and DNA methylation in breast cancer cells, while increasing the activity of certain genes. A computer model suggested liraglutide may block a key enzyme involved in DNA methylation. In mice with breast tumors, liraglutide alone or combined with chemotherapy drugs reduced tumor size and altered gene activity linked to DNA demethylation.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalChem Biol Interact, 2021
Citations32
Relative citation ratio2.07
NIH percentile75
Molecules liraglutide

Abstract

Breast cancer (BC) is the most frequently diagnosed female cancer and second leading cause of death. Despite the discovery of many antineoplastic drugs for BC, the current therapy is not totally efficient. In this study, we investigated the potential of repurposing the well-known diabetes type II drug liraglutide to modulate epigenetic modifications in BC cells lines in vitro and in vivo via Ehrlich mice tumors models. The in vitro results revealed a significant reduction on cell viability, migration, DNMT activity and displayed lower levels of global DNA methylation in BC cell lines after liraglutide treatment. The interaction between liraglutide and the DNMT enzymes resulted in a decrease profile of DNA methylation for the CDH1, ESR1 and ADAM33 gene promoter regions and, consequently, increased their gene and protein expression levels. To elucidate the possible interaction between liraglutide and the DNMT1 protein, we performed an in silico study that indicates liraglutide binding in the catalytic cleft via hydrogen bonds and salt bridges with the interdomain contacts and disturbs the overall enzyme conformation. The in vivo study was also able to reveal that liraglutide and the combined treatment of liraglutide and paclitaxel or methotrexate were effective in reducing tumor growth. Moreover, the modulation of CDH1 and ADAM33 mouse gene expression by DNA demethylation suggests a role for liraglutide in DNMT activity in vivo. Altogether, these results indicate that liraglutide may be further analysed as a new adjuvant treatment for BC.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 34534549 ↗

Related research