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Liraglutide alleviates myocardial ischemia‒reperfusion injury in diabetic mice.

Mol Cell Endocrinol · 2023

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on diabetic mice, the drug liraglutide reduced the size of heart damage caused by a heart attack and improved heart function. The drug worked by activating a process called autophagy through the AMPK/mTOR pathway, which helps protect heart cells.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalMol Cell Endocrinol, 2023
Citations16
Relative citation ratio2.28
NIH percentile77
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Heart Failure

Abstract

Diabetic patients are prone to acute myocardial infarction. Although reperfusion therapy can preserve the viability of the myocardium, it also causes fatal ischemia‒reperfusion injury. Diabetes can exacerbate myocardial ischemia‒reperfusion injury, but the mechanism is unclear. We aimed to characterize the effects of liraglutide on the prevention of ischemia‒reperfusion injury and inadequate autophagy. Liraglutide reduced the myocardial infarction area and improved cardiac function in diabetic mice. We further demonstrated that liraglutide mediated these protective effects by activating AMPK/mTOR-mediated autophagy. Liraglutide markedly increased p-AMPK levels and the LC3 II/LC3 I ratio and reduced p-mTOR levels and p62 expression. Pharmacological inhibition of mTOR increased cell viability and autophagy levels in high glucose and H/R-treated H9C2 cells. Overall, our study reveals that liraglutide acts upstream of the AMPK/mTOR pathway to effectively counteract high glucose- and H/R-induced cell dysfunction by activating AMPK/mTOR-dependent autophagy, providing a basis for the clinical prevention and treatment of ischemia‒reperfusion in diabetes.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37172886 ↗

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