The potential protective effect of liraglutide on valproic acid induced liver injury in rats: Targeting HMGB1/RAGE axis and RIPK3/MLKL mediated necroptosis.
Cell Biochem Funct · 2023
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 40 rats, those given liraglutide alongside valproic acid (VPA) had lower liver damage markers and inflammation compared to rats given only VPA. Liraglutide reduced liver enzymes by up to 50% and decreased markers of cell death and stress, while increasing protective antioxidants. The effects were measured over 4 weeks.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Cell Biochem Funct, 2023 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 7 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.22 |
| NIH percentile | 57 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Mash |
Abstract
Valproic acid (VPA) is a commonly used drug for management of epilepsy. Prolonged VPA administration increases the risk of hepatotoxicity. Liraglutide is a glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonist that act as a novel antidiabetic drug with broad-spectrum anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects. This study tested the protective effect of liraglutide against VPA-induced hepatotoxicity elucidating the possible underlying molecular mechanisms. Forty adult male rats were allocated in to four equally sized groups; Group I (control group) received oral distilled water and subcutaneous normal saline for 2 weeks followed by subcutaneous normal saline only for 2 weeks. Group II (liraglutide group) received subcutaneous liraglutide dissolved in normal saline daily for 4 weeks. Group III (valproic acid-treated group) received sodium valproate dissolved in distilled water for 2 weeks. Group IV (Combined valproic acid & liraglutide treated group) received valproic acid plus liraglutide daily for 2 weeks which was continued for additional 2 weeks after valproic acid administration. The hepatic index was calculated. Serum AST, ALT, GGT, and ALP activities were estimated. Hepatic tissue homogenate MDA, GSH, SOD, HMGB1, MAPK, RIPK1, and RIPK3 levels were evaluated using ELISA. However, hepatic RAGE and MLKL messenger RNA expression levels using the QRT-PCR technique. Hepatic NF-κB and TNF-α were detected immunohistochemically. Results proved that liraglutide coadministration significantly decreased liver enzymes, MDA, HMGB1, MAPK, RIPK1 RIPK3, RAGE, and MLKL with concomitant increased GSH and SOD in comparison to the correspondent values in VPA-hepatotoxicity group. Conclusions: Liraglutide's protective effects against VPA-induced hepatotoxicity are triggered by ameliorating oxidative stress, inflammation, and necroptosis.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37771193 ↗
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