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GLP-1 and GIP agonism has no direct actions in human hepatocytes or hepatic stellate cells.

Cell Mol Life Sci · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

A study tested whether GLP-1 and GIP drugs (Liraglutide, Acyl-GIP, and a dual agonist called MAR709) directly affect human liver cells or scar-forming liver cells. At doses that normally boost insulin release, none of the drugs changed fat levels in liver cells or reduced scarring in scar-forming cells. The results suggest these drugs may work indirectly, possibly by improving weight, insulin resistance, or blood sugar control rather than acting directly on liver cells.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalCell Mol Life Sci, 2024
Citations16
Relative citation ratio2.63
NIH percentile81
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity, Chronic Kidney Disease, Mash

Abstract

The use of incretin agonists for managing metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) is currently experiencing considerable interest. However, whether these compounds have a direct action on MASH is still under debate. This study aims to investigate whether GLP-1R/GIPR agonists act directly in hepatocytes and hepatic stellate cells (HSCs). For this, human hepatocyte and HSCs lines, as well as primary human hepatocytes and HSCs treated with Liraglutide, Acyl-GIP or the GLP-1/GIP dual agonist (MAR709) were used. We show that the concentrations of each compound, which were effective in insulin release, did not induce discernible alterations in either hepatocytes or HSCs. In hepatocytes displaying elevated fatty acid content after the treatment with oleic acid and palmitic acid, none of the three compounds reduced lipid concentration. Similarly, in HSCs activated with transforming growth factor-β (TGFb), Liraglutide, Acyl-GIP and MAR709 failed to ameliorate the elevated expression of fibrotic markers. The three compounds were also ineffective in phosphorylating CREB, which mediates insulinotropic actions, in both hepatocytes and HSCs. These findings indicate that incretin agonists have no direct actions in human hepatocytes or hepatic stellate cells, suggesting that their beneficial effects in patients with MASH are likely mediated indirectly, potentially through improvements in body weight, insulin resistance and glycemic control.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39607493 ↗