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Neuronal GLP1R mediates liraglutide's anorectic but not glucose-lowering effect.

J Clin Invest · 2014

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study with mice, researchers found that removing GLP1 receptors from the brain or nerves did not change the drug liraglutide’s ability to lower blood sugar. However, the drug no longer reduced food intake or body weight in mice missing GLP1 receptors in the brain, showing these effects depend on brain receptors.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Clin Invest, 2014
Citations342
Relative citation ratio11.35
NIH percentile98
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity

Abstract

Glucose control and weight loss are cornerstones of type 2 diabetes treatment. Currently, only glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP1) analogs are able to achieve both weight loss and glucose tolerance. Both glucose and body weight are regulated by the brain, which contains GLP1 receptors (GLP1R). Even though the brain is poised to mediate the effects of GLP1 analogs, it remains unclear whether the glucose- and body weight-lowering effects of long-acting GLP1R agonists are via direct action on CNS GLP1R or the result of downstream activation of afferent neuronal GLP1R. We generated mice with either neuronal or visceral nerve-specific deletion of Glp1r and then administered liraglutide, a long-acting GLP1R agonist. We found that neither reduction of GLP1R in the CNS nor in the visceral nerves resulted in alterations in body weight or food intake in animals fed normal chow or a high-fat diet. Liraglutide treatment provided beneficial glucose-lowering effects in both chow- and high-fat-fed mice lacking GLP1R in the CNS or visceral nerves; however, liraglutide was ineffective at altering food intake, body weight, or causing a conditioned taste aversion in mice lacking neuronal GLP1R. These data indicate that neuronal GLP1Rs mediate body weight and anorectic effects of liraglutide, but are not required for glucose-lowering effects.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24762441 ↗

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