Frontiers in Pharmacology (Mar 2020)

Fibroblast Growth Factor 1 Ameliorates Diabetes-Induced Liver Injury by Reducing Cellular Stress and Restoring Autophagy

  • Zeping Xu,
  • Yanqing Wu,
  • Fan Wang,
  • Fan Wang,
  • Xiaofeng Li,
  • Ping Wang,
  • Yuying Li,
  • Junnan Wu,
  • Yiyang Li,
  • Ting Jiang,
  • Xindian Pan,
  • Xie Zhang,
  • Longteng Xie,
  • Jian Xiao,
  • Yanlong Liu,
  • Yanlong Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2020.00052
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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BackgroundType 2 diabetes (T2D) is a metabolic dysfunction disease that causes several complications. Liver injury is one of these that severely affects patients with diabetes. Fibroblast growth factor 1 (FGF1) has glucose-lowering activity and plays a role in modulation of several liver injuries. Nevertheless, the effects and potential mechanisms of FGF1 against diabetes-induced liver injury are unknown.MethodsTo further investigate the effect of FGF1 on diabetic liver injury, we divided db/db mice into two groups and intraperitoneally (i.p.) injected either with FGF1 at 0.5 mg/kg body weight or saline every other day for 4 weeks. Then body weights were measured. Serum and liver tissues were collected for biochemical and molecular analyses.ResultsFGF1 significantly reduced blood glucose and ameliorated diabetes-induced liver steatosis, fibrosis, and apoptosis. FGF1 also restored defective hepatic autophagy in db/db mice. Mechanistic investigations showed that diabetes markedly induced oxidative stress and endoplasmic reticulum stress and that FGF1 treatment significantly attenuated these effects.ConclusionsFGF1-associated glucose level reduction and amelioration of cellular stress are potential protective effects of FGF1 against diabetes-induced liver injury.

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