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Unraveling the impact of semaglutide in a diabetic rat model of testicular dysfunction: Insights into spermatogenesis pathways and miRNA-148a-5p.

Steroids · 2025

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 28 diabetic rats, those given semaglutide (25 nmol/kg daily for four weeks) showed improvements in sexual and testicular function compared to untreated diabetic rats. Semaglutide helped restore normal levels of genes and proteins related to sperm production, balanced oxidative stress, and reduced inflammation in the testes. The treatment also improved hormonal profiles linked to reproduction.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalSteroids, 2025
Citations3
Molecules semaglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Fertility

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diabetes has been a long-known risk factor for male sexual dysfunction, which may be caused by persistent hyperglycemia, oxidative stress, and spermatogenesis inhibition. This study explored the potential of Semaglutide (Sem) to alleviate testicular dysfunction and spermatogenesis impairment in diabetic rats to understand the molecular mechanism of this protective effect. METHODOLOGY: A controlled experiment was conducted where 28 adult male rats were divided into four groups: control, Semaglutide, diabetic, and diabetes + Sem. Diabetes was induced using a single STZ dose (50 mg/kg, i.p.). At the same time, Sem was administered as a daily subcutaneous dose (25 nmol/kg) for four weeks after the confirmed diagnosis of diabetes. Several biochemical and histochemical analyses were performed in addition to mating behavior assessments. The estimation of spermatogenesis-related genes and proteins was conducted using PCR and western blotting techniques. RESULTS: revealed promising outcomes, wherein Sem treatment effectively mitigated diabetes-induced sexual and testicular dysfunction. Specifically, it regulated the disrupted redox balance, restored spermatogenesis gene and protein levels, modulated hormonal profiles, and mitigated testicular inflammation. CONCLUSION: Sem protects against diabetes-induced testicular and sexual impairments by influencing several pathways and restoring spermatogenesis-related genes and proteins. Future studies may involve a potential investigation of Sem translational applications in clinical settings for treating male infertility associated with diabetes.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39551458 ↗

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