日本語フィールド
著者:Shiraki A, Oyama JI, Shimizu T, Node K題名:Linagliptin exacerbates heart failure due to energy deficiency via downregulation of glucose utilization and absorption in a mouse model発表情報:Eur J Pharmacol 巻: 948 ページ: 175673キーワード:DPP4 inhibitor; GLP-1; Glucose; Heart failure; Malabsorption; Metabolism概要:Use of dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP4) inhibitor in some clinical trials might have caused heart failure (HF), leading to increased hospitalizations. The aim of the present study was to determine whether linagliptin has any effect on chronic dilated HF, and its underlying mechanisms. Physiologic and pathologic studies were conducted on heart/muscle-specific manganese superoxide dismutase-deficient mice, which exhibited dilated cardiomyopathy, and were randomized to receive a low dose (1 mg/kg, HF-L group) or high dose (10 mg/kg, HF-H group) mixed with food, or normal food (HF group), for 8 weeks. Linagliptin increased mortality and heart/body weight ratio in mice with HF. Cardiac contractility and fibrosis worsened, whereas hepatic glycogen content and individual carbohydrate consumption decreased significantly in the HF-H group, when compared with the HF control group. Therefore, we performed a complementary experiment by supplementing glucose to the mice treated with high-dose linagliptin (HF-HG group). Adequate glucose supplementation reduced heart/body weight ratio and cardiac fibrosis, and improved cardiac contractility, without changing mortality. Following oral administration of 13C glucose, the respiratory 13C decreased in the HF-H and HF-HG groups, when compared with that in the HF group; the fecal 13C increased, suggesting that linagliptin inhibited glucose absorbance in the intestine. In addition, the expression of GLUT2, a glucose transporter was downregulated in the small intestine. Linagliptin treatment exacerbated HF, which increased mortality, cardiac function, and fibrosis. DPP4 inhibitors might boost cardiac cachexia and exacerbate HF, at least in part, through the modification of glucose utilization and absorption. 抄録:英語フィールド
Author:Shiraki A, Oyama JI, Shimizu T, Node KTitle:Linagliptin exacerbates heart failure due to energy deficiency via downregulation of glucose utilization and absorption in a mouse modelAnnouncement information:Eur J Pharmacol Vol: 948 Page: 175673Keyword:DPP4 inhibitor; GLP-1; Glucose; Heart failure; Malabsorption; MetabolismAn abstract:Use of dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP4) inhibitor in some clinical trials might have caused heart failure (HF), leading to increased hospitalizations. The aim of the present study was to determine whether linagliptin has any effect on chronic dilated HF, and its underlying mechanisms. Physiologic and pathologic studies were conducted on heart/muscle-specific manganese superoxide dismutase-deficient mice, which exhibited dilated cardiomyopathy, and were randomized to receive a low dose (1 mg/kg, HF-L group) or high dose (10 mg/kg, HF-H group) mixed with food, or normal food (HF group), for 8 weeks. Linagliptin increased mortality and heart/body weight ratio in mice with HF. Cardiac contractility and fibrosis worsened, whereas hepatic glycogen content and individual carbohydrate consumption decreased significantly in the HF-H group, when compared with the HF control group. Therefore, we performed a complementary experiment by supplementing glucose to the mice treated with high-dose linagliptin (HF-HG group). Adequate glucose supplementation reduced heart/body weight ratio and cardiac fibrosis, and improved cardiac contractility, without changing mortality. Following oral administration of 13C glucose, the respiratory 13C decreased in the HF-H and HF-HG groups, when compared with that in the HF group; the fecal 13C increased, suggesting that linagliptin inhibited glucose absorbance in the intestine. In addition, the expression of GLUT2, a glucose transporter was downregulated in the small intestine. Linagliptin treatment exacerbated HF, which increased mortality, cardiac function, and fibrosis. DPP4 inhibitors might boost cardiac cachexia and exacerbate HF, at least in part, through the modification of glucose utilization and absorption.