4.6 Article

One year of sitagliptin treatment protects against islet amyloid-associated β-cell loss and does not induce pancreatitis or pancreatic neoplasia in mice

Journal

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00025.2013

Keywords

DPP-4 inhibitor; IAPP; beta-cell mass; amyloid; exocrine pancreas pathology

Funding

  1. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [K99-DK-080945, T32-DK-007247, P30-DK-017047]
  2. University of Washington McAbee Fellowship
  3. American Diabetes Association Mentor Award
  4. Department of Veterans Affairs

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The dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitor sitagliptin is an attractive therapy for diabetes, as it increases insulin release and may preserve beta-cell mass. However, sitagliptin also increases beta-cell release of human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP), the peptide component of islet amyloid, which is cosecreted with insulin. Thus, sitagliptin treatment may promote islet amyloid formation and its associated beta-cell toxicity. Conversely, metformin treatment decreases islet amyloid formation by decreasing beta-cell secretory demand and could therefore offset sitagliptin's potential proamyloidogenic effects. Sitagliptin treatment has also been reported to be detrimental to the exocrine pancreas. We investigated whether long-term sitagliptin treatment, alone or with metformin, increased islet amyloid deposition and beta-cell toxicity and induced pancreatic ductal proliferation, pancreatitis, and/or pancreatic metaplasia/neoplasia. hIAPP transgenic and nontransgenic littermates were followed for 1 yr on no treatment, sitagliptin, metformin, or the combination. Islet amyloid deposition, beta-cell mass, insulin release, and measures of exocrine pancreas pathology were determined. Relative to untreated mice, sitagliptin treatment did not increase amyloid deposition, despite increasing hIAPP release, and prevented amyloid-induced beta-cell loss. Metformin treatment alone or with sitagliptin decreased islet amyloid deposition to a similar extent vs untreated mice. Ductal proliferation was not altered among treatment groups, and no evidence of pancreatitis, ductal metaplasia, or neoplasia were observed. Therefore, long-term sitagliptin treatment stimulates beta-cell secretion without increasing amyloid formation and protects against amyloid-induced beta-cell loss. This suggests a novel effect of sitagliptin to protect the beta-cell in type 2 diabetes that appears to occur without adverse effects on the exocrine pancreas.

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