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Exendin-4 exhibits cardioprotective effects against high glucose-induced mitochondrial abnormalities: Potential role of GLP-1 receptor and mTOR signaling.

Biochem Pharmacol · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

In lab tests on heart cells, high blood sugar caused damage to energy-producing parts of the cells (mitochondria), reducing their ability to function and survive. Treating the cells with exendin-4—a GLP-1 drug—or rapamycin helped protect the mitochondria, and combining both treatments fully reversed the damage. Blocking the GLP-1 receptor removed these protective effects, showing that exendin-4 works through this pathway.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalBiochem Pharmacol, 2024
Citations11
Relative citation ratio2.28
NIH percentile77
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction

Abstract

Mitochondrial dysfunction is associated with hyperglycemic conditions and insulin resistance leading to cellular damage and apoptosis of cardiomyocytes in diabetic cardiomyopathy. The dysregulation of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) is linked to cardiomyopathies and myocardial dysfunctions mediated by hyperglycemia. However, the involvements of mTOR for GLP-1 receptor-mediated cardioprotection against high glucose (HG)-induced mitochondrial disturbances are not clearly identified. The present study demonstrated that HG-induced cellular stress and mitochondrial damage resulted in impaired ATP production and oxidative defense markers such as catalase and SOD2, along with a reduction in survival markers such as Bcl-2 and p-Akt, while an increased expression of pro-apoptotic marker Bax was observed in H9c2 cardiomyoblasts. In addition, the autophagic marker LC3-II was considerably reduced, together with the disruption of autophagy regulators (p-mTOR and p-AMPKα) under the hyperglycemic state. Furthermore, there was a dysregulated expression of several indicators related to mitochondrial homeostasis, including MFN2, p-DRP1, FIS1, MCU, UCP3, and Parkin. Remarkably, treatment with either exendin-4 (GLP-1 receptor agonist) or rapamycin (mTOR inhibitor) significantly inhibited HG-induced mitochondrial damage while co-treatment of exendin-4 and rapamycin completely reversed all mitochondrial abnormalities. Antagonism of GLP-1 receptors using exendin-(9-39) abolished these cardioprotective effects of exendin-4 and rapamycin under HG conditions. In addition, exendin-4 attenuated HG-induced phosphorylation of mTOR, and this inhibitory effect was antagonized by exendin-(9-39), indicating the regulation of mTOR by GLP-1 receptor. Therefore, improvement of mitochondrial dysfunction by stimulating the GLP-1 receptor/AMPK/Akt pathway and inhibiting mTOR signaling could ameliorate cardiac abnormalities caused by hyperglycemic conditions.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39307319 ↗