GLPwatch

Anorexigenic and anti-inflammatory signaling pathways of semaglutide via the microbiota-gut--brain axis in obese mice.

Inflammopharmacology · 2025

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on obese mice fed a high-fat diet, treatment with semaglutide (0.05 mg/kg weekly for six weeks) improved blood sugar control, reduced harmful blood fats, and lowered insulin resistance. The drug also decreased gut and blood inflammation markers, changed the gut bacteria makeup by increasing beneficial bacteria like Bacteroides acidifaciens and Blautia coccoides, and increased acetate levels in the brain. These changes were linked to reduced brain inflammation and improved brain insulin function, which may help lower food intake.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalInflammopharmacology, 2025
Citations21
Relative citation ratio8.47
Molecules semaglutide
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

Our study focused on a mouse model of obesity induced by a high-fat diet (HFD). We administered Semaglutide intraperitoneally (Ozempic ®-0.05 mg/Kg-translational dose) every seven days for six weeks. HFD-fed mice had higher blood glucose, lipid profile, and insulin resistance. Moreover, mice fed HFD showed high gut levels of TLR4, NF-kB, TNF-α, IL-1β, and nitrotyrosine and low levels of occludin, indicating intestinal inflammation and permeability, culminating in higher serum levels of IL-1β and LPS. Treatment with semaglutide counteracted the dyslipidemia and insulin resistance, reducing gut and serum inflammatory markers. Structural changes in gut microbiome were determined by 16S rRNA sequencing. Semaglutide reduced the relative abundance of Firmicutes and augmented that of Bacteroidetes. Meanwhile, semaglutide dramatically changed the overall composition and promoted the growth of acetate-producing bacteria (Bacteroides acidifaciens and Blautia coccoides), increasing hypothalamic acetate levels. Semaglutide intervention increased the number of hypothalamic GLP-1R+ neurons that mediate endogenous action on feeding and energy. In addition, semaglutide treatment reversed the hypothalamic neuroinflammation HDF-induced decreasing TLR4/MyD88/NF-κB signaling and JNK and AMPK levels, improving the hypothalamic insulin resistance. Also, semaglutide modulated the intestinal microbiota, promoting the growth of acetate-producing bacteria, inducing high levels of hypothalamic acetate, and increasing GPR43+ /POMC+ neurons. In the ARC, acetate activated the GPR43 and its downstream PI3K-Akt pathway, which activates POMC neurons by repressing the FoxO-1. Thus, among the multifactorial effectors of hypothalamic energy homeostasis, possibly higher levels of acetate derived from the intestinal microbiota contribute to reducing food intake.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39586940 ↗

Related research