Protection of glucagon-like peptide-1 in cisplatin-induced renal injury elucidates gut-kidney connection.
J Am Soc Nephrol · 2013
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study on mice, a chemotherapy drug called cisplatin caused severe kidney damage, including increased blood markers of kidney injury and cell death in kidney tissue. However, treatment with a DPP-4 inhibitor (alogliptin) or a GLP-1 receptor agonist (exendin-4) reduced this damage and lowered markers of cell death. The protective effects were linked to higher levels of GLP-1 in the blood and were reversed when the kidney's GLP-1 receptors were blocked.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Am Soc Nephrol, 2013 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 62 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.11 |
| NIH percentile | 75 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Chronic Kidney Disease |
Abstract
Accumulating evidence of the beyond-glucose lowering effects of a gut-released hormone, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), has been reported in the context of remote organ connections of the cardiovascular system. Specifically, GLP-1 appears to prevent apoptosis, and inhibition of dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4), which cleaves GLP-1, is renoprotective in rodent ischemia-reperfusion injury models. Whether this renoprotection involves enhanced GLP-1 signaling is unclear, however, because DPP-4 cleaves other molecules as well. Thus, we investigated whether modulation of GLP-1 signaling attenuates cisplatin (CP)-induced AKI. Mice injected with 15 mg/kg CP had increased BUN and serum creatinine and CP caused remarkable pathologic renal injury, including tubular necrosis. Apoptosis was also detected in the tubular epithelial cells of CP-treated mice using immunoassays for single-stranded DNA and activated caspase-3. Treatment with a DPP-4 inhibitor, alogliptin (AG), significantly reduced CP-induced renal injury and reduced the renal mRNA expression ratios of Bax/Bcl-2 and Bim/Bcl-2. AG treatment increased the blood levels of GLP-1, but reversed the CP-induced increase in the levels of other DPP-4 substrates such as stromal cell-derived factor-1 and neuropeptide Y. Furthermore, the GLP-1 receptor agonist exendin-4 reduced CP-induced renal injury and apoptosis, and suppression of renal GLP-1 receptor expression in vivo by small interfering RNA reversed the renoprotective effects of AG. These data suggest that enhancing GLP-1 signaling ameliorates CP-induced AKI via antiapoptotic effects and that this gut-kidney axis could be a new therapeutic target in AKI.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24092928 ↗