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The effects of metformin, pioglitazone, exenatide and exercise on fatty liver in obese diabetic rats: the role of IRS-1 and SOCS-3 molecules. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how treatments like metformin, pioglitazone, exenatide, and exercise affect fatty liver and insulin signaling in obese diabetic rats.
  • The research involved a controlled experiment with 48 male rats that were fed a high-fat diet and then treated with different interventions over 4 weeks.
  • Results showed that exercise significantly reduced liver fat levels and improved insulin signaling compared to untreated obese diabetic rats, making it a potentially effective method for managing fatty liver disease in this context.

Article Abstract

Background: Obesity-induced inflammation mechanism is seen as a mechanism that may be the cause of insulin resistance and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Pathological destruction of insulin signaling molecules such as insulin receptor substrate proteins (IRS), especially due to the increase of cytokine signal suppressors (SOCS), has been demonstrated in experimental diabetes. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of metformin, pioglitazone, exenatide and exercise treatments used in type 2 diabetes on fatty liver and the role of Irs-1 and Socs3 molecules in this process in obese diabetic rats.

Methods: The study was conducted on 48 Wistar albino adult male rats weighing 180-220 g and randomly divided into 6 groups. The obese rat model with fatty liver was formed with a 60% fat diet for 4 weeks. Afterwards, drug treatment with metformin (Ob + D + M), pioglitazone (Ob + D + P), exenatide (Ob + D + ExA)) or exercise (Ob + D + ExE) was applied for 4 weeks to these obese groups, in which diabetes was induced by streptozocin (STZ). At the end of the experimental protocol, liver tissue samples were taken from all rat groups and histopathological and genetic analyses were performed.

Results: The mean steatosis degrees of the Ob + D + ExA and Ob + D + ExE groups were statistically significantly decreased compared to the obese diabetic group (p < 0.001). The group with the lowest mean steatosis grade was the Ob + D + ExE. Decrease in SOCS-3 expression was significant in Ob + D + M and Ob + D + P groups than other groups (p < 0.05). Mean staining intensities of Ob + D + Ex group, Ob + D + ExE group and Ob + D + P group according to IRS-1 expression statistically significantly increased compared to obese diabetic group (p < 0.05). Average staining intensity of Ob + D + ExE group according to IRS-1 expression was significant than other groups.

Conclusion: Exercise and exenatide treatments seemed to be the prominent treatment methods by showing a statistically significant effect in decreasing the degree of steatosis, decreasing the Socs3 expression level and increasing the Irs-1 expression level.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10787-021-00916-6DOI Listing

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