GLPwatch

Monotreme glucagon-like peptide-1 in venom and gut: one gene - two very different functions.

Sci Rep · 2016

Last updated 2026-05-28

Platypuses and echidnas produce a single GLP-1 hormone that works in both their gut and venom. Unlike typical GLP-1, this version resists breakdown by the enzyme DPP-4, similar to the venom peptide Exendin-4 in gila monsters. In lab tests, the monotreme GLP-1 still triggered insulin release in rodent cells but showed weaker receptor binding and a different signaling pathway. Researchers suggest these changes may result from the hormone’s dual role in digestion and venom.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalSci Rep, 2016
Citations13
Relative citation ratio0.57
NIH percentile33
Molecules

Abstract

The importance of Glucagon like peptide 1 (GLP-1) for metabolic control and insulin release sparked the evolution of genes mimicking GLP-1 action in venomous species (e.g. Exendin-4 in Heloderma suspectum (gila monster)). We discovered that platypus and echidna express a single GLP-1 peptide in both intestine and venom. Specific changes in GLP-1 of monotreme mammals result in resistance to DPP-4 cleavage which is also observed in the GLP-1 like Exendin-4 expressed in Heloderma venom. Remarkably we discovered that monotremes evolved an alternative mechanism to degrade GLP-1. We also show that monotreme GLP-1 stimulates insulin release in cultured rodent islets, but surprisingly shows low receptor affinity and bias toward Erk signaling. We propose that these changes in monotreme GLP-1 are the result of conflicting function of this peptide in metabolic control and venom. This evolutionary path is fundamentally different from the generally accepted idea that conflicting functions in a single gene favour duplication and diversification, as is the case for Exendin-4 in gila monster. This provides novel insight into the remarkably different metabolic control mechanism and venom function in monotremes and an unique example of how different selective pressures act upon a single gene in the absence of gene duplication.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27898108 ↗