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Protection of exenatide for retinal ganglion cells with different glucose concentrations
Authors:Fu Zheng  Kuang Hong-Yu  Hao Ming  Gao Xin-Yuan  Liu Yu  Shao Ning
Affiliation:Department of Endocrinology, Ningde Hospital, 352100, Fujian Province, China.
Abstract:Exendin-4 is a peptide resembling glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), which has protective effects on nerve cells. However, the effects of Exendin-4 on retinal ganglion cells (RGC) are still under clear. The purpose of the present study is to demonstrate that exenatide prevents high- or low-glucose-induced retinal ganglion cell impairment. We observed the expression of GLP-1R in RGC-5 cells by immunofluorescence and Western blot. To investigate the effect of exenatide on RGC-5 cells incubated different glucose concentrations, CCK-8 measured the survival rates and electron microscopy detected cellular injury. The expression levels of Bcl-2 and Bax were analyzed by immunocytochemistry and Western blot. Exenatide protects RGC-5 from high- or low-glucose-induced cellular injury and the optimum concentration was 0.5μg/ml. Exenatide can inhibit high- or low-glucose-induced mitochondrial changes. Exenatide protects RGC-5 from high- or low-glucose-induced Bax increased and Bcl-2 decreased. Furthermore, the protective effect of exenatide could be inhibited by Exendin (9-39). These findings indicate that exenatide shows a neuroprotective effect for different glucose concentrations-induced RGC-5 cells injury. Exenatide could protect RGC-5 cells from degeneration or death, which may protect retinal function and have a potential value for patients with diabetic retinopathy.
Keywords:Diabetic retinopathy   Exenatide   Retinal ganglion cells   Diabetes mellitus   RGC-5
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