| Literature DB >> 35370875 |
Xiaoyan Yang1, Qiang Qiang1, Nan Li1, Peng Feng2, Wenshi Wei1, Christian Hölscher2,3.
Abstract
The public and social health burdens of ischemic stroke have been increasing worldwide. Hyperglycemia leads to a greater risk of stroke. This increased risk is commonly seen among patients with diabetes and is in connection with worsened clinical conditions and higher mortality in patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS). Therapy for stroke focuses mainly on restoring cerebral blood flow (CBF) and ameliorating neurological impairment caused by stroke. Although choices of stroke treatment remain limited, much advance have been achieved in assisting patients in recovering from ischemic stroke, along with progress of recanalization therapy through pharmacological and mechanical thrombolysis. However, it is still necessary to develop neuroprotective therapies for AIS to protect the brain against injury before and during reperfusion, prolong the time window for intervention, and consequently improve neurological prognosis. Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) are broadly regarded as effective drugs in the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Preclinical data on GLP-1 and GLP-1 RAs have displayed an impressive neuroprotective efficacy in stroke, Parkinson's disease (PD), Alzheimer's disease (AD), Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and other neurodegenerative diseases. Based on the preclinical studies in the past decade, we review recent progress in the biological roles of GLP-1 and GLP-1 RAs in ischemic stroke. Emphasis will be placed on their neuroprotective effects in experimental models of cerebral ischemia stroke at cellular and molecular levels.Entities:
Keywords: GLP-1; GLP-1R agonists; diabetes; neuroprotection; stroke
Year: 2022 PMID: 35370875 PMCID: PMC8964641 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.844697
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Characteristics of GLP-1 RAs that have been approved to treat type 2 diabetes as of 2021, modified from Li et al. (54).
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| Exenatide | Byetta® | 2.4 h | Twice daily/s.c. | Amylin-Astra Zeneca | U.S.FDA, 2005; EMA, 2006 |
| Exenatide LAR | Bydureon® | ~2 w | Once weekly/s.c. | Amylin-Astra Zeneca | U.S.FDA, 2012 |
| Liraglutide | Victoza® | 13 h | Once daily/s.c. | Novo Nordisk | U.S.FDA, 2010; EMA, 2009 |
| Albiglutide | Tanzeum(US)® | 5 d | Once weekly/s.c. | Glaxo SmithKline | U.S.FDA, 2014 |
| Eperzan(EU)® | 5 d | Once weekly/s.c. | Glaxo SmithKline | EMA, 2014 | |
| Dulaglutide | Trulicity® | 5 d | Once weekly/s.c. | Eli Lilly | U.S.FDA, 2014 |
| Lixisenatide | Lyxumia® | 3 h | Once daily/s.c. | Sanofi-Aventis | EMA, 2013 |
| Adlyxin® | 3 h | Once daily /s.c. | Sanofi-Aventis | U.S.FDA, 2016 | |
| Semaglutide | Ozempic® | 5.7–6.7 d | Once weekly/s.c. | Novo Nordisk | U.S.FDA, 2017; EMA, 2019 |
| Rybelsus® | 5.7–6.7 d | Once daily/Oral | Novo Nordisk | U.S.FDA, 2019 |
FDA, The Food and Drug Administration; EMA, European Medicines Agency; s.c.,subcutaneous; LAR, long-acting release.
A review of preclinical studies of GLP-1 and GLP-1RAs in stroke.
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| Zhao et al. ( | RhGLP-1 (7–36) | pMCAO | Permanent | Rat | Before reperfusion, i.p. | Diabetic | RhGLP-1: Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓, MDA↓, eNOS↑, SOD↑, iNOS↓, GSH-PX↑. | |
| Nimodipine | Before reperfusion, i.p. | Nimo: Neurological deficits↓, infarct volume↓, MDA↓, SOD↑, GSH-PX↑, iNOS↓, eNOS↑. | ||||||
| Zhang et al. ( | Pro-GLP-1 | tMCAO | 90 | Mice | 1 w, qd, i.p. | – | – | GLP-1↑, neurological deficits↓, infarct volume↓, Bax↓, Bcl-2↑, caspase-3↓. |
| Jiang et al. ( | RhGLP-1 | tMCAO | 90 | Rat | 2 w, tid, i.p. | – | Diabetic | RhGLP-1: FBG↓, neurological deficits↓, infarct volume↓, S100B↓, NSE↓, MBP↓. |
| Nimodipine | 2 w, tid, i.p. | – | Nimo: Neurological deficits↓, infarct volume↓, S100B↓, MBP↓. | |||||
| Insulin aspart | 2 w, tid, i.p. | Ins: FBG↓, neurological deficits↓, infarct volume↓. | ||||||
| Fang et al. ( | RhGLP-1 | tMCAO | 120 | Rat | – | 2 h → 3 d, tid, i.p. | Diabetic | RhGLP-1: FBG↓, Neurological deficits↓, infarct volume↓, Nrf2↑, HO-1↑, p-PI3K/PI3K↑, SOD↑, MDA↑. |
| Nimodipine | – | 2 h → 3 d, tid, i.p. | Nimo: Neurological deficits↓, infarct volume↓, Nrf2↑, HO-1↑, SOD↑, MDA↑. | |||||
| Insulin | – | 2 h → 3 d, tid, i.p. | Ins: FBG↓, Nrf2↑, HO-1↑, p-PI3K/PI3K↑, SOD↑, MDA↑. | |||||
| Fang et al. ( | RhGLP-1 | tMCAO | 90 | Rat | 2 w, tid, i.p. | – | Diabetic | RhGLP-1: Neurological deficits↓, FBG↓, infarct volume↓, MDA↓, GSH↑, SOD↑, EAAT2↑, cleaved caspase-3↓, Bcl-2/Bax↑. |
| Nimodipine | 2 w, tid, i.p. | – | Nimo: Infarct volume↓, neurological deficits↓, MDA↓, GSH↑, EAAT2↑, SOD↑, cleaved caspase-3↓, Bcl-2/Bax↑. | |||||
A review of preclinical studies of GLP-1 and GLP-1RAs in stroke.
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| Han et al. ( | DA | tMCAO | 60 | Rat | – | 1 h, i.p. | – | DA: Neurological deficit↓, infarct volume↓, Bcl-2↑, TUNEL↓, Bax↓, iNOS↓. |
| Val(8)GLP-1-Glu-PAL | – | 1 h, i.p. | – | Val(8): Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓, Bcl-2↑, TUNEL↓, Bax↓, iNOS↓. | ||||
| Bai et al. ( | DA3-CH | tMCAO | 120 | Rat | 2 w, qd, i.p. | – | Diabetic | DA3: Neurological deficit↓, infarct volume↓, CHOP↓, NeuN↑, GRP78↓, Bax↓, Bcl-2↑, caspase-12↓. |
| Liraglutide | 2 w, qd, i.p. | – | – | Lir: Neurological deficit↓, infarct volume↓, Bcl-2↑, NeuN↑, GRP78↓, CHOP↓, Bax↓, caspase-12↓. | ||||
| Li et al. ( | OXM | tMCAO | 60 | Rat | 15 min, i.c.v | – | – | CAMP↑, GLP-1R↑, p-CREB/CREB↑, PKA↑, MAPK, cell viability↑, infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓. |
| Wang et al. ( | P7C3 | tMCAO | 40 | Mice | – | 2 h → 3 d, qd, i.v. | – | P7C3: Survival rates↑, neurological deficits↓, infarct volume↓, BBB leakage↓, p65 NF-κB↓, iNOS↓, caspase-3↓, a-caspase-3↓, DCX↑, β-tub3, ki67, BrdU↑, adam11↑, adamts20↑, SpGSK-3↑, Bcl-2↑, p-PKA↑, p-Akt↑, p-catenin↑, cAMP↑, and dependent of GLP-1R. |
| Exendin-4/ Exendin 9-39 | –/ 15 min, i.v. | 2 h → 3 d, qd, i.v./2 h, i.v. | – | Ex-4: Survival rates↑, cAMP↑. | ||||
↑, enhancement; ↓, reduction; i.p., intraperitoneal; s.c., subcutaneous; i.c.v., intracerebroventricular; i.n., intranasal; t.v., transvenous; p.o., oral; MCAO, middle cerebral artery occlusion; p/tMCAO, permanent/transient; BCCAO, bilateral common carotid artery occlusion; TUNEL, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT)-mediated dUTP-biotin nick-end labeling; ROS, reactive oxygen species; M2, anti-inflammatory macrophages: marked by CD206, arginase1 and YM1/2; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; p-Akt, phosphorylated protein kinase B; ED1, a marker of activated microglia; 8-OHdG, 8-hydroxy deoxyguanosine; p-CREB, phosphorylated cyclic AMP (cAMP) response element binding protein; COX-2, cyclo-oxygenase-2; MDA, malondialdehyde; PKA, protein kinase A; DCX, doublecortin; NSE, neuron specific enolase; MCP-1, monocyte chemotactic protein 1; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase; SOD, superoxide dismutase; Bax, Bcl-2-associated X protein; DNP, dinitrophenol; GSH, reduced glutathione; GFAP, glial fibrillary acidic protein; PI3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinase; γH2AX, Histone H2A (Lys119); NeuN, neuronal nuclei protein; APE1, apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1; CHOP, CCAAT/-enhancer-binding protein homologous protein; GSK3β, glycogen synthase kinase 3β; NF-κB, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain enhancer of activated B cells; IL-1β, Interleukin-1 beta; Bcl-2, B-cell lymphoma 2; HIF-1α, hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha; gp91, glycoprotein91; p-eNOS, phosphorylated endothelial nitric oxide synthases; ICAM-1, intercellular adhesion molecule 1; HHE, 4-hydroxy 2-hexenal; DHE, dihydroethidium; cAMP, cyclic adenosine monophosphate; PARP, poly ADP-ribose polymerase; BBB, blood brain barrier; 8-OHdG, 8-Oxo2'-deoxyguanosine; MPO, myeloperoxidase; HO-1, heme oxygenase-1; MBP, myelin basic protein; Nrf2, nuclear factor erythroid-2; Ki67, nuclear proliferation antigen; Iba-1, ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule-1; SDF-1, stromal cell derived factor-1.
Figure 1Proposed mechanisms of neuroprotective efficacy exerted by GLP-1 and GLP-1RAs against stroke in animals. Effects of GLP-1 and GLP-1RAs are mediated by binding to a specific, seven-transmembrane GLP-1R which is positively coupled to the adenylyl cyclase (AC) system. GLP-1 and GLP-1RAs acts directly by the cAMP/PKA signal pathway to facilitate gene transcription, synapse growth and repair, cell growth, and regeneration. The Gβγ dimer stimulates the PI3K, which then activates PKB/AKT pathway to inhibit apoptosis. In addition, GLP-1 and GLP-1 RAs play a role through reduction of blood-brain barrier leakage and neurotransmitter transmission among synapses as well.
A review of preclinical studies of GLP-1 and GLP-1RAs in stroke.
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| Huang et al. ( | GLP-1 (9–36) | tMCAO | 60 | Mice | 1 w, qd, i.p. | – | – | Neurological deficits↓, infarct volume↓, NF-κB-p65↓, p- AKT↑. |
| Lee et al. ( | Exendin-4 | BCCAO | 5 | Gerbil | 2 h, i.p. | 1 h, i.p. | – | Neuronal death delay, GLP-1R↑, Iba-1↓, and independent of endothelin receptor. |
| Teramoto et al. ( | Exendin-4 | tMCAO | 60 | Mice | – | Onset, 1, 3 h, i.v. | – | Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓, inflammatory response (Iba-1↓, iNOS↓), cell death↓, cAMP↑, p-CREB↑, oxidative stress markers (8-OHdG↓, HHE↓). |
| Briyal et al. ( | Exendin-4 | pMCAO | Permanent | Rat | 1 w, bid, i.p. | – | – | Oxidative stress markers (SOD↑,MDA↓, GSH↑), infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓. |
| Darsalia et al. ( | Exendin-4 | tMCAO | 90 | Rat | 4 w, bid, i.p. | 2/4 w, bid, i.p. | Diabetic | NeuN↑, Iba-1↓, ED1↓, Ki67↑, DCX↑. |
| Darsalia et al. ( | Exendin-4 | tMCAO | 30 | Mice | – | 1.5/3/4.5 h → 1 w, qd, i.p. | Diabetic/obese | Proinflammatory markers (MCP-1↓, IL-1β↓), NeuN↑, M2 markers (CD206↑, Arg1↑, YM1/2↑). |
| Jin et al. ( | Exendin-4 | BCCAO | 7 | Gerbil | 30 min, i.p. | 30 min → 2 d, bid, i.p. | – | NeuN↑, Fluoro-Jade B↓, Bcl-2/Bax↑, HIF-1α↓. |
| Jia et al. ( | Exendin-4/ | tMCAO | 60 | Rat | 15 min, i.c.v. | – | – | Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓, β-endorphin↑. |
| Exendin 9-39 | 15 and 15 min after first one, i.c.v. | – | Ex 9–39: Prevented neuroprotection of Ex-4. | |||||
| Chien et al., ( | Exendin-4/PEx-4 | BCCAO | 10 | Rat | – | 24h, s.c. | Diabetic | Ex-4: Cerebral blood flow and microcirculation↑, gp91↓, CHOP↓, GFAP↓, ICAM-1↓, NF-κB↓, cognition deficit↓, p-eNOS↑, TUNEL↓, caspase-3↓, p-Akt↑, PARP↓, Bax/Bcl-2↓, ICAM-1↓. PEx-4 was more effective than Ex-4. |
A review of preclinical studies of GLP-1 and GLP-1RAs in stroke.
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| Zhang et al. ( | Exendin-4 | tMCAO | 90 | Mice | 1 w, q d, i.n./i.p. | – | – | Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓, cAMP/PKA/p-CREB↑, PI3K/p-Akt↑, caspase-3↓, neuroprotection of intranasal Ex-4 depended on activation of GLP-1R. |
| Kuroki ( | Exendin-4 | tMCAO | 60 | Mice | – | 60 min, i.p. | Hyperglycemia | Infarct volume↓, edema volume↓, neurological deficit↓, survival rate↑, MMP-9↓, BBB permeability↓, Iba-1↓, neutrophil infiltration↓, TNF-α↓, oxidative stress markers (DNP↓). |
| Li et al. ( | Exendin-4/ | tMCAO | 60 | Mice | – | Onset/3/6/12 h,i.p. | Diabetic | Ex-4: Oxidative stress markers (ROS↓, ICAM-1↓, MDA↓ DHE↓), edema volume↓, cerebral microcirculation↑, apoptosis markers (TUNEL↓, caspase-3↓), MnSOD↓, PARP↓,p eNOS↑, Bax/Bcl-2↓, NF-κB p50 and p65↓, p-Akt↑, voiding impairments↓, cognition deficit↓. |
| Liraglutide | – | Onset/3/6/12h,i.p. | Lir: Oxidative stress markers (ROS↓, ICAM-1↓, MDA↓ DHE↓), edema volume↓, cerebral microcirculation↑, apoptosis markers (TUNEL↓, caspase-3↓), MnSOD↓, PARP↓,p eNOS↑, Bax/Bcl-2↓, NF-κB p50 and p65↓, p-Akt↑, voiding impairments↓, cognition deficit↓. | |||||
| Chen et al. ( | Exendin-4 | tMCAO | 45 | Mice | – | Onset, i.v. | Hemorrhagic transformation | Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓, PI3K/Akt/GSK-3β↓, claudin-3↑, p-β-catenin/β-catenin↓, TNF-α↓, claudin-5↑, ICAM-1↓, IL-1β↓, IKK-β↓, VCAM-1↓, 8-OHdG↓, HHE↓, MPO↓, Iba1+/TNF-α↓, NF-κB↓. |
A review of preclinical studies of GLP-1 and GLP-1RAs in stroke.
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| Yang et al. ( | Exendin-4 | tMCAO | 60 | Rat | – | 1/2/3/4/5/7/10d, qd, i.v. | – | APE1↑, γH2AX↓, PI3K/p-AKT↑/p-CREB↑. |
| Kim et al. ( | Exendin-4/ | tMCAO | 60 | Rat | 30 min, i.c.v. | – | – | Ex-4: Infarction volume↓, GLP-1R↑, cAMP↑, IB1/JIP1↑, p-SAPK↓/p-JNK↓, COX-2↓, PGE2↓. |
| Exendin 9-39 | 30 min, i.c.v. | – | – | Ex 9-39: infarction volume↓, GLP-1R↓, p-JNK↑. | ||||
| Shan et al. ( | Exendin-4/ | tMCAO | 90 | Rat | – | Onset, i.p. | – | Ex-4: Neurological deficit↓, infarct volume↓, MCP-1↓, MMP-9↓, IL-1β↓, CXCL-1↓, VEGF-A↓, IL-6↓, ZO-1↑, PLCγ↓/PKCα↓/eNOS↓, p-JAK2↓/p-STAT3↓. |
| Exendin 9-39 | – | Onset, i.p. | – | Ex 9-39: neuroprotection of Ex-4 was blocked by combination with Ex 9-39. | ||||
| Zhang et al. ( | Exendin-4 | tMCAO | 60 | Mice | 1/3/7/14 d, qd, i.p. | – | – | Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓, p-PI3K↑/p-AKT↑, p-mTOR↑, HIF-1α↑. |
| Augestad et al. ( | Exendin-4 | tMCAO | 30 | Mice | – | 3 d → 6/8 w, qd, i.p. | Diabetic/obese | Insulin sensitivity↑, Iba-1↓, CD68↓, vessel density↑, CD13+↑, neurological deficit↓. |
| Nizari et al. ( | Exendin-4/ | tMCAO | 90 | Rat | 20/10 min before reperfusion; i.v. | RIC | RIC: Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓. Ex-4: GLP-1R↑, PO2↑, PtO2↑. | |
| Exendin 9-39 | 10 min prior to the first episode of RIC | Ex 9-39: blocked the neuroprotective effect of RIC. | ||||||
| Sato et al. ( | Liraglutide | tMCAO | 90 | Rat | – | 1 h, i.p. | – | Neurological deficit↓, oxidative stress markers (d-ROMs↓), infarct volume↓, VEGF↑. |
A review of preclinical studies of GLP-1 and GLP-1RAs in stroke.
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| Briyal et al. ( | Liraglutide | pMCAO | Permanent | Rat | 2 w, s.c. | – | Diabetic | Infarct volume↓, oxidative stress markers (MDA↓, GSH↑, SOD↑), apoptosis-related protein (Bcl-2↑, Bax↓), neurological deficit↓. |
| Zhu et al. ( | Liraglutide | pMCAO | Permanent | Rat | – | 1/2/7 d, qd, s.c. | – | Neurological deficit↓, infarct volume↓, Bcl-xl/Bad↑, p-P38↓, JNK↓, Bcl-2/Bax↑, TUNEL↓, caspase-3↓/−8↓/-9↓, PARP↓, p-ERK↑, ROS↓, p-AKT↑. |
| Dong et al. ( | Liraglutide | tMCAO | 90 | Rat | – | 1 d → 4 w, qd, s.c. | – | Neurological deficit↓, glucose metabolism (18F FDG↑), GFAP↓, GLP-1R↑, NeuN↑, vWF↑. |
| Deng et al. ( | Liraglutide | pMCAO | Permanent | Rat | 1 w, bid, i.p. | 1 w, bid, i.p. | Diabetic | Neurological deficit↓, infarct volume↓, HO-1↓, Nrf2↓, oxidative stress (MPO↓, SOD↑). |
| Chen et al. ( | Liraglutide | pMCAO | Permanent | Mice | – | 1 d → 2 w, qd, i.p. | – | Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓, VEGF↑, BrdU+/CD31+ ECs↑. |
| Zhu et al. ( | Liraglutide | pMCAO | Permanent | Rat | – | 1 h → 1 w, qd, s.c. | – | Sensory impairment↓, Aβ↓, NeuN↑, GFAP↓, Iba-1↓, TUNEL↓, Bcl-2↑, Bax↓. |
| Filchenko et al. ( | Liraglutide | tMCAO | 30 | Rat | 1 w, qd, s.c. | – | Diabetic | Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓. |
| He ( | Liraglutide | pMCAO | Permanent | Mice | – | 1 w, qd, s.c. | – | Neurological deficit↓, BDA-labeled axons↑, mitochondrial activities (ICDH↑, α-KG↑, DH↑, SDH↑), oxidative stress markers (cell viability, ATP levels↑, NeuN↑, LDH release↓, GAP-43↑, ROS↓, MMP↑, Fis1↓, complex mitochondrial-I↑). |
A review of preclinical studies of GLP-1 and GLP-1RAs in stroke.
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| Basalay et al. ( | Liraglutide / | tMCAO | 90/120/180 | Rat | – | Onset, i.v. | – | Lir: Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓. |
| Semaglutide | 5 min before reperfusion, s.c. | – | Sema: Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓. | |||||
| Exendin 9-39 | 15 min before Sema, i.v. | – | Neuroprotection by Sema was abolished by Ex 9-39. | |||||
| Shi et al. ( | Liraglutide | pMCAO | Permanent | Rat | – | 1 h, i.p. | Diabetic | Lir: Blood glucose↓, neurological deficit↓, infarct volume↓, oxidative stress (SOD↑, MPO↓), Kir6.2↑, SUR1↑. |
| Insulin | – | 1 h, i.p. | Ins: Blood glucose↓. | |||||
| Li et al. ( | Liraglutide | tMCAO | 120 | Mice | – | Onset → 2 d, q4 h | Diabetic | Infarct volume↓, PAWR↑, Haptoglobin (Hp)↓, Bcl-2↑, Bax↓, Serum amyloid A protein (SAA)↓, synapsis-related proteins↑ (Dpysl2, Syn1, Bsn, Map1b, Nf1, and Pde2a). |
| Abdel-latif et al. ( | Lixisenatide | BCCAO | 30 | Rat | – | 1 and 24 h, i.p | – | Lixi: Neurological deficit↓, GSH↑, catalase enzyme↑, MDA↓, caspase-3↓, TNF-α↓, VEGF↑, infarct volume↓, eNOS↑, exerted effects via GLP-1R dependent and independent pathways. |
| Exendin 9-39 | – | 1 and 24 h, i.p. | – | Ex 9-39: Reversed some of the protective effects of Ex-4. | ||||
A review of preclinical studies of GLP-1 and GLP-1RAs in stroke.
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| Abdel-latif et al. ( | Lixisenatide/ | BCCAO | 30 | Rat | 2 w, qd, i.p. | – | Diabetic | Lixi: Insulin resistance↓, HOMA-IR↓, TG↓, LDL-C↓, NOX2↓, neurological deficits↓, oxidative stress markers (MDA↓, NOS↓, GSH↑), caspase-3↓, TNF-α↓, eNOS↓, infarct volume↓. |
| Glimepiride | 2 w, qd, p.o | – | Insulin resistance↓, HOMA-IR↓, TG↓, LDL-C↓, neurological | |||||
| Gad et al. ( | Lixisenatide | BCCAO | 60 | Rat | 2 w, qd, i.p. | – | – | Lixi: MAPK (p-P38↓and p-ERK↑), oxidative stress (MDA↓, SOD↑, GSH↑), TLR↓/NF-κB↓, IL-1β↓, MPO↓, TNF-α↓, Bax↓, Bcl-2↑, caspase-3↓. |
| Yang etal. ( | Semaglutide | pMCAO | Permanent | Rat | – | 2 h → 2 w, q2 d, i.p. | – | Neurological deficit↓, p38 MAPK↓, Iba-1↓, DCX↑, MKK↓, NF-κB p65↓, c-raf↑, c-Jun↓, Bcl-2/Bax↑, ERK2↑, caspase-3↓, ERK1/2↑, p-ERK1/2↑, IRS-1↑, p-IRS-1↑, nestin↑, CXCR4↑, SDF-1↑. |
| Zhang et al. ( | DMB/ | tMCAO | 60 | Mice | 30 min, p.o. | – | – | DMB: Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓, cAMP↑/PKA↑/p-CREB↑, Bcl-2↑, Bax↓. |
| Exendin-4/ | 30 min, i.p. | – | – | Ex-4: Infarct volume↓, neurological deficit↓. | ||||
| Exendin 9-39 | Ex 9-39: blocked the beneficial effects of Ex-4 but not DMB. | |||||||