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Antinociceptive Behavior, Glutamine/Glutamate, and Neopterin in Early-Stage Streptozotocin-Induced Diabetic Neuropathy in Liraglutide-Treated Mice under a Standard or Enriched Environment.

Int J Mol Sci · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on mice with early-stage diabetes, the drug liraglutide (0.4 mg/kg daily for 10 days) did not lower blood sugar levels but reduced pain-related behavior in a test. Mice treated with liraglutide in an enriched environment showed significantly less pain response than those in standard conditions (2.00 seconds vs. 29.00 seconds). Liraglutide also increased a marker of oxidative stress (glutamine/glutamate ratio) and lowered another marker of inflammation (neopterin) compared to untreated diabetic mice.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalInt J Mol Sci, 2024
Citations6
Relative citation ratio1.43
NIH percentile63
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Diabetic neuropathy (DN) is a common complication of long-lasting type 1 and type 2 diabetes, with no curative treatment available. Here, we tested the effect of the incretin mimetic liraglutide in DN in mice with early-stage type 1 diabetes bred in a standard laboratory or enriched environment. With a single i.p. injection of streptozotocin 150 mg/kg, we induced murine diabetes. Liraglutide (0.4 mg/kg once daily, i.p. for ten days since the eighth post-streptozotocin day) failed to decrease the glycemia in the diabetic mice; however, it alleviated their antinociceptive behavior, as tested with formalin. The second phase of the formalin test had significantly lower results in liraglutide-treated mice reared in the enriched environment vs. liraglutide-treated mice under standard conditions [2.00 (0.00-11.00) vs. 29.00 (2.25-41.50) s, = 0.016]. Liraglutide treatment, however, decreased the threshold of reactivity in the von Fray test. A significantly higher neopterin level was demonstrated in the diabetic control group compared to treatment-naïve controls and the liraglutide-treated diabetic mice ( < 0.001). The glutamine/glutamate ratio in both liraglutide-treated groups, either reared under standard conditions ( = 0.003) or an enriched environment ( = 0.002), was significantly higher than in the diabetic controls. This study demonstrates an early liraglutide effect on pain sensation in two streptozotocin-induced diabetes mouse models by reducing some inflammatory and oxidative stress parameters.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39409118 ↗

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