International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Feb 2023)

Acute PDE4 Inhibition Induces a Transient Increase in Blood Glucose in Mice

  • Daniel Irelan,
  • Abigail Boyd,
  • Edward Fiedler,
  • Peter Lochmaier,
  • Will McDonough,
  • Ileana V. Aragon,
  • Lyudmila Rachek,
  • Lina Abou Saleh,
  • Wito Richter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24043260
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 4
p. 3260

Abstract

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cAMP-phosphodiesterase 4 (PDE4) inhibitors are currently approved for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. There is interest in expanding the therapeutic application of PDE4 inhibitors to metabolic disorders, as their chronic application induces weight loss in patients and animals and improves glucose handling in mouse models of obesity and diabetes. Unexpectedly, we have found that acute PDE4 inhibitor treatment induces a temporary increase, rather than a decrease, in blood glucose levels in mice. Blood glucose levels in postprandial mice increase rapidly upon drug injection, reaching a maximum after ~45 min, and returning to baseline within ~4 h. This transient blood glucose spike is replicated by several structurally distinct PDE4 inhibitors, suggesting that it is a class effect of PDE4 inhibitors. PDE4 inhibitor treatment does not reduce serum insulin levels, and the subsequent injection of insulin potently reduces PDE4 inhibitor-induced blood glucose levels, suggesting that the glycemic effects of PDE4 inhibition are independent of changes in insulin secretion and/or sensitivity. Conversely, PDE4 inhibitors induce a rapid reduction in skeletal muscle glycogen levels and potently inhibit the uptake of 2-deoxyglucose into muscle tissues. This suggests that reduced glucose uptake into muscle tissue is a significant contributor to the transient glycemic effects of PDE4 inhibitors in mice.

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