Canagliflozin retards age-related lesions in heart, kidney, liver, and adrenal gland in genetically heterogenous male mice

Jessica M. Snyder(University of Washington), Kerriann M. Casey(Stanford University), Andrzej T. Gałecki(University of Michigan), David Harrison(Jackson Laboratory), Hashan Jayarathne(Wayne State University), Navasuja Kumar(University of Michigan), Francesca Macchiarini(National Institute on Aging), Nadia Rosenthal(Jackson Laboratory), Marianna Sadagurski(Wayne State University), Adam B. Salmon(The University of Texas at San Antonio Health Science Center), Randy Strong(The University of Texas at San Antonio Health Science Center), Richard A. Miller(University of Michigan), Warren Ladiges(University of Washington)
GeroScience
August 16, 2022
Cited by 32Open Access
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Abstract

Canagliflozin (Cana), a clinically important anti-diabetes drug, leads to a 14% increase in median lifespan and a 9% increase in the 90th percentile age when given to genetically heterogeneous male mice from 7 months of age, but does not increase lifespan in female mice. A histopathological study was conducted on 22-month-old mice to see if Cana retarded diverse forms of age-dependent pathology. This agent was found to diminish incidence or severity, in male mice only, of cardiomyopathy, glomerulonephropathy, arteriosclerosis, hepatic microvesicular cytoplasmic vacuolation (lipidosis), and adrenal cortical neoplasms. Protection against atrophy of the exocrine pancreas was seen in both males and females. Thus, the extension of lifespan in Cana-treated male mice, which is likely to reflect host- or tumor-mediated delay in lethal neoplasms, is accompanied by parallel retardation of lesions, in multiple tissues, that seldom if ever lead to death in these mice. Canagliflozin thus can be considered a drug that acts to slow the aging process and should be evaluated for potential protective effects against many other late-life conditions.


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