Liraglutide modulates morpho-functional and inflammatory gastrointestinal responses in rats.
Eur J Clin Invest · 2024
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 26 obese rats given Liraglutide for 30 days, those receiving higher doses (400 or 1200 micrograms per kilogram per day) showed slower stomach emptying and reduced stomach muscle thickness. The highest dose also lowered inflammation markers in the gut and decreased fat deposits, cholesterol, and liver enzymes compared to rats given saline.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Eur J Clin Invest, 2024 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 3 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.72 |
| NIH percentile | 40 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Obesity impairs homeostatic control of energy and is associated with chronic low-grade inflammation. Effects of glucagon-like peptide-1, the target in the gastrointestinal tract for anti-obesity drugs such as Liraglutide, were not properly associated with inflammation markers. This study investigated the effects of Liraglutide on metabolic and gastrointestinal parameters in a rat model of obesity.
METHODS: Twenty-six Wistar rats with obesity were randomly distributed to receive saline (n = 10), 400 μg (n = 8), or 1200 μg of Liraglutide/kg/day (n = 8), subcutaneously for 30 consecutive days, once a day. Weight gain, feeding efficiency, caloric consumption, gastric motility, adiposity, histomorphometric, murinometric, biochemical parameters and cytokines TNF-α and TGF-β1 in duodenal tissue were measured. Data were analysed by ANOVA, followed by Bonferroni post hoc or Kruskal-Wallis test, followed by Dunn's multiple comparison test.
RESULTS: Liraglutide-treated animals had better feeding efficiency and higher caloric intake in a dose-dependent manner. Higher doses slowed gastric emptying and diminished the amplitude of gastric contractions. These effects were accompanied by decreases in intestinal muscle layer thickness and crypt depth. Liraglutide significantly reduced retroperitoneal and visceral white adipose tissue depots. High-dose treatment decreased levels of TNF-α and enhanced levels of TGF-β1 in duodenal tissue. Liraglutide treatment provided significant reductions in total cholesterol, triglyceride and hepatic transaminases.
CONCLUSIONS: Liraglutide reduced fat accumulation, improved metabolic parameters and downregulated levels of inflammatory signalling in duodenal tissue. Liraglutide at high doses controlled obesity-related outcomes, and such effects seemed to be driven by its action on glucagon-like peptide-1 receptors in the gastrointestinal tract slowing gastric motility.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37846206 ↗
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