TY - JOUR
T1 - GLP-1 secretion is regulated by IL-6 signalling
T2 - a randomised, placebo-controlled study
AU - Ellingsgaard, Helga
AU - Seelig, Eleonora
AU - Timper, Katharina
AU - Coslovsky, Michael
AU - Soederlund, Line
AU - Lyngbaek, Mark P.
AU - Wewer Albrechtsen, Nicolai J.
AU - Schmidt-Trucksäss, Arno
AU - Hanssen, Henner
AU - Frey, Walter O.
AU - Karstoft, Kristian
AU - Pedersen, Bente K.
AU - Böni-Schnetzler, Marianne
AU - Donath, Marc Y.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Aims/hypothesis: IL-6 is a cytokine with various effects on metabolism. In mice, IL-6 improved beta cell function and glucose homeostasis via upregulation of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1), and IL-6 release from muscle during exercise potentiated this beneficial increase in GLP-1. This study aimed to identify whether exercise-induced IL-6 has a similar effect in humans. Methods: In a multicentre, double-blind clinical trial, we randomly assigned patients with type 2 diabetes or obesity to intravenous tocilizumab (an IL-6 receptor antagonist) 8 mg/kg every 4 weeks, oral sitagliptin (a dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor) 100 mg daily or double placebos (a placebo saline infusion every 4 weeks and a placebo pill once daily) during a 12 week training intervention. The primary endpoints were the difference in change of active GLP-1 response to an acute exercise bout and change in the AUC for the concentration–time curve of active GLP-1 during mixed meal tolerance tests at baseline and after the training intervention. Results: Nineteen patients were allocated to tocilizumab, 17 to sitagliptin and 16 to placebos. During the acute exercise bout active GLP-1 levels were 26% lower with tocilizumab (multiplicative effect: 0.74 [95% CI 0.56, 0.98], p = 0.034) and 53% higher with sitagliptin (1.53 [1.15, 2.03], p = 0.004) compared with placebo. After the 12 week training intervention, the active GLP-1 AUC with sitagliptin was about twofold that with placebo (2.03 [1.56, 2.62]; p < 0.001), while GLP-1 AUC values showed a small non-significant decrease of 13% at 4 weeks after the last tocilizumab infusion (0.87 [0.67, 1.12]; p = 0.261). Conclusions/interpretation: IL-6 is implicated in the regulation of GLP-1 in humans. IL-6 receptor blockade lowered active GLP-1 levels in response to a meal and an acute exercise bout in a reversible manner, without lasting effects beyond IL-6 receptor blockade. Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01073826. Funding: Danish National Research Foundation. Danish Council for Independent Research. Novo Nordisk Foundation. Danish Centre for Strategic Research in Type 2 Diabetes. European Foundation for the Study of Diabetes. Swiss National Research Foundation.
AB - Aims/hypothesis: IL-6 is a cytokine with various effects on metabolism. In mice, IL-6 improved beta cell function and glucose homeostasis via upregulation of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1), and IL-6 release from muscle during exercise potentiated this beneficial increase in GLP-1. This study aimed to identify whether exercise-induced IL-6 has a similar effect in humans. Methods: In a multicentre, double-blind clinical trial, we randomly assigned patients with type 2 diabetes or obesity to intravenous tocilizumab (an IL-6 receptor antagonist) 8 mg/kg every 4 weeks, oral sitagliptin (a dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor) 100 mg daily or double placebos (a placebo saline infusion every 4 weeks and a placebo pill once daily) during a 12 week training intervention. The primary endpoints were the difference in change of active GLP-1 response to an acute exercise bout and change in the AUC for the concentration–time curve of active GLP-1 during mixed meal tolerance tests at baseline and after the training intervention. Results: Nineteen patients were allocated to tocilizumab, 17 to sitagliptin and 16 to placebos. During the acute exercise bout active GLP-1 levels were 26% lower with tocilizumab (multiplicative effect: 0.74 [95% CI 0.56, 0.98], p = 0.034) and 53% higher with sitagliptin (1.53 [1.15, 2.03], p = 0.004) compared with placebo. After the 12 week training intervention, the active GLP-1 AUC with sitagliptin was about twofold that with placebo (2.03 [1.56, 2.62]; p < 0.001), while GLP-1 AUC values showed a small non-significant decrease of 13% at 4 weeks after the last tocilizumab infusion (0.87 [0.67, 1.12]; p = 0.261). Conclusions/interpretation: IL-6 is implicated in the regulation of GLP-1 in humans. IL-6 receptor blockade lowered active GLP-1 levels in response to a meal and an acute exercise bout in a reversible manner, without lasting effects beyond IL-6 receptor blockade. Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01073826. Funding: Danish National Research Foundation. Danish Council for Independent Research. Novo Nordisk Foundation. Danish Centre for Strategic Research in Type 2 Diabetes. European Foundation for the Study of Diabetes. Swiss National Research Foundation.
KW - Diabetes
KW - Exercise
KW - Glucagon-like peptide-1
KW - Interleukin-6
KW - Obesity
U2 - 10.1007/s00125-019-05045-y
DO - 10.1007/s00125-019-05045-y
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 31796986
AN - SCOPUS:85075937407
VL - 63
SP - 362
EP - 373
JO - Diabetologia
JF - Diabetologia
SN - 0012-186X
IS - 2
ER -