Does GLP-1 receptor activation with exenatide reduce platelet aggregation and thrombus formation in preclinical models?
Human megakaryocyte cell line (MEG-01), human and mouse whole blood, and mouse cremaster artery laser injury models (including normoglycemic, hyperglycemic, Glp1r(-/-) bone marrow transplants, and endothelial nitric oxide synthase deficient mice)
GLP-1 and the GLP-1R agonist exenatide (in vitro incubation and single intravenous injection)
Control conditions and wild-type bone marrow transplanted mice
Platelet aggregation and thrombus formationsurrogate
GLP-1 receptor activation attenuates platelet aggregation and thrombosis, offering a mechanistic explanation for the rapid reduction in cardiovascular events seen with GLP-1 targeted therapies.
Short-term studies in subjects with diabetes receiving glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1)-targeted therapies have suggested a reduced number of cardiovascular events. The mechanisms underlying this unexpectedly rapid effect are not known. We cloned full-length GLP-1 receptor (GLP-1R) mRNA from a human megakaryocyte cell line (MEG-01), and found expression levels of GLP-1Rs in MEG-01 cells to be higher than those in the human lung but lower than in the human pancreas. Incubation with GLP-1 and the GLP-1R agonist exenatide elicited a cAMP response in MEG-01 cells, and exenatide significantly inhibited thrombin-, ADP-, and collagen-induced platelet aggregation. Incubation with exenatide also inhibited thrombus formation under flow conditions in ex vivo perfusion chambers using human and mouse whole blood. In a mouse cremaster artery laser injury model, a single intravenous injection of exenatide inhibited thrombus formation in normoglycemic and hyperglycemic mice in vivo. Thrombus formation was greater in mice transplanted with bone marrow lacking a functional GLP-1R (Glp1r(-/-)), compared with those receiving wild-type bone marrow. Although antithrombotic effects of exenatide were partly lost in mice transplanted with bone marrow from Glp1r(-/-) mice, they were undetectable in mice with a genetic deficiency of endothelial nitric oxide synthase. The inhibition of platelet function and the prevention of thrombus formation by GLP-1R agonists represent potential mechanisms for reduced atherothrombotic events.
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Alison Cameron-Vendrig
St. Michael's Hospital
Reheman Adili
University of Michigan
M. Ahsan Siraj
Toronto Public Health
Diabetes
Harvard University
University of Toronto
Massachusetts General Hospital
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Cameron-Vendrig et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69df3e574fb243fc8e591c60 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2337/db15-1141
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