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Glucagon-like peptide-1 analog liraglutide leads to multiple metabolic alterations in diet-induced obese mice.

J Biol Chem · 2022

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on obese mice fed a high-fat diet for 8 weeks, a 2-week treatment with the GLP-1 drug liraglutide led to changes in how fats, proteins, and carbohydrates were processed in the brain, blood, liver, and muscles. The drug appeared to adjust how these tissues interacted metabolically, which may help explain its effects on diabetes and obesity.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Biol Chem, 2022
Citations18
Relative citation ratio1.56
NIH percentile66
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Obesity, Mash

Abstract

Liraglutide, a glucagon-like peptide-1 analog, has beneficial metabolic effects in patients with type 2 diabetes and obesity. Although the high efficacy of liraglutide as an anti-diabetic and anti-obesity drug is well known, liraglutide-induced metabolic alterations in diverse tissues remain largely unexplored. Here, we report the changes in metabolic profiles induced by a 2-week subcutaneous injection of liraglutide in diet-induced obese mice fed a high-fat diet for 8 weeks. Our comprehensive metabolomic analyses of the hypothalamus, plasma, liver, and skeletal muscle showed that liraglutide intervention led to various metabolic alterations in comparison with diet-induced obese or nonobese mice. We found that liraglutide remarkably coordinated not only fatty acid metabolism in the hypothalamus and skeletal muscle but also amino acid and carbohydrate metabolism in plasma and liver. Comparative analyses of metabolite dynamics revealed that liraglutide rewired intertissue metabolic correlations. Our study points to a previously unappreciated metabolic alteration by liraglutide in several tissues, which may underlie its therapeutic effects within and across the tissues.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 36356900 ↗

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