Liraglutide and Naringenin relieve depressive symptoms in mice by enhancing Neurogenesis and reducing inflammation.
Eur J Pharmacol · 2024
Last updated 2026-05-28In a mouse study, the anti-diabetic drug liraglutide (200 mcg/kg) and the natural compound naringenin (50 mg/kg) each reduced depressive symptoms—such as anxiety, loss of pleasure, and hopelessness—when given alone or together for 28 days. Both treatments also improved brain cell growth, lowered brain inflammation, and restored brain chemical levels similar to the antidepressant escitalopram. When started at the same time as a depression-inducing drug, liraglutide and naringenin prevented depression from developing in the mice.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Eur J Pharmacol, 2024 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 16 |
| Relative citation ratio | 5.06 |
| NIH percentile | 92 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Depression |
Abstract
Depression is a debilitating mental disease that negatively impacts individuals' lives and society. Novel hypotheses have been recently proposed to improve our understanding of depression pathogenesis. Impaired neuroplasticity and upregulated neuro-inflammation add-on to the disturbance in monoamine neurotransmitters and therefore require novel anti-depressants to target them simultaneously. Recent reports demonstrate the antidepressant effect of the anti-diabetic drug liraglutide. Similarly, the natural flavonoid naringenin has shown both anti-diabetic and anti-depressant effects. However, the neuro-pharmacological mechanisms underlying their actions remain understudied. The study aims to evaluate the antidepressant effects and neuroprotective mechanisms of liraglutide, naringenin or a combination of both. Depression was induced in mice by administering dexamethasone (32 mcg/kg) for seven consecutive days. Liraglutide (200 mcg/kg), naringenin (50 mg/kg) and a combination of both were administered either simultaneously or after induction of depression for twenty-eight days. Behavioral and molecular assays were used to assess the progression of depressive symptoms and biomarkers. Liraglutide and naringenin alone or in combination alleviated the depressive behavior in mice, manifested by decrease in anxiety, anhedonia, and despair. Mechanistically, liraglutide and naringenin improved neurogenesis, decreased neuroinflammation and comparably restored the monoamines levels to that of the reference drug escitalopram. The drugs protected mice from developing depression when given simultaneously with dexamethasone. Collectively, the results highlight the usability of liraglutide and naringenin in the treatment of depression in mice and emphasize the different pathways that contribute to the pathogenesis of depression.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 38561101 ↗
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