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Sotagliflozin attenuates liver-associated disorders in cystic fibrosis rabbits
Xiubin Liang, … , Kezhong Zhang, Jie Xu
Xiubin Liang, … , Kezhong Zhang, Jie Xu
Published February 15, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2024;9(6):e165826. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.165826.
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Research Article Hepatology Therapeutics

Sotagliflozin attenuates liver-associated disorders in cystic fibrosis rabbits

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Abstract

Mutations in the cystic fibrosis (CF) transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene lead to CF, a life-threating autosomal recessive genetic disease. While recently approved Trikafta dramatically ameliorates CF lung diseases, there is still a lack of effective medicine to treat CF-associated liver disease (CFLD). To address this medical need, we used a recently established CF rabbit model to test whether sotagliflozin, a sodium-glucose cotransporter 1 and 2 (SGLT1/2) inhibitor drug that is approved to treat diabetes, can be repurposed to treat CFLD. Sotagliflozin treatment led to systemic benefits to CF rabbits, evidenced by increased appetite and weight gain as well as prolonged lifespan. For CF liver-related phenotypes, the animals benefited from normalized blood chemistry and bile acid parameters. Furthermore, sotagliflozin alleviated nonalcoholic steatohepatitis–like phenotypes, including liver fibrosis. Intriguingly, sotagliflozin treatment markedly reduced the otherwise elevated endoplasmic reticulum stress responses in the liver and other affected organs of CF rabbits. In summary, our work demonstrates that sotagliflozin attenuates liver disorders in CF rabbits and suggests sotagliflozin as a potential drug to treat CFLD.

Authors

Xiubin Liang, Xia Hou, Mohamad Bouhamdan, Yifei Sun, Zhenfeng Song, Carthic Rajagopalan, Hong Jiang, Hong-Guang Wei, Jun Song, Dongshan Yang, Yanhong Guo, Yihan Zhang, Hongmei Mou, Jifeng Zhang, Y. Eugene Chen, Fei Sun, Jian-Ping Jin, Kezhong Zhang, Jie Xu

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Figure 5

Sotagliflozin improves NASH-like phenotypes in the liver of CF rabbits.

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Sotagliflozin improves NASH-like phenotypes in the liver of CF rabbits.
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H&E, Sirius red, and PAS staining of CF rabbits treated with or without sotagliflozin. In the H&E panel, arrows indicate inflammatory infiltration, and arrowheads indicate Mallory bodies. In the H&E panel, the arrows point to the representative duct structures with or without biliary cirrhosis. In the Sirius red panel, arrows indicate normal glycogen or perivenular fibrosis (WT or CF+Sota group) and portal or bridging fibrosis (CF group). The PAS panel shows the content and distribution of hepatic glycogens (red aggregate staining) across WT, CF, and CF+Sota groups. In Supplemental Figure 5, low- and medium-magnification images for H&E, Sirus red, and PAS staining are provided for overviews of the changes in content and distribution of hepatic glycogens and fibrosis across the groups. CF+Sota, CF rabbits treated with sotagliflozin. Scale bars: 20 μm.

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