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The combination of a glucagon-like peptide-1 and amylin receptor agonists reduces alcohol consumption in both male and female rats.

Acta Neuropsychiatr · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

In two experiments with rats, combining two diabetes-like drugs—one that mimics GLP-1 (dulaglutide) and another that mimics amylin (salmon calcitonin)—reduced alcohol consumption in both males and females. The effect was stronger when salmon calcitonin was added to ongoing dulaglutide treatment, though the rats eventually developed tolerance when both drugs were started at the same time. The combination also lowered food intake and body weight in both sexes, but did not change markers of inflammation or the genes for the drug targets.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalActa Neuropsychiatr, 2024
Citations3
Relative citation ratio0.80
NIH percentile43
Molecules
Conditions studied Alcohol Use Disorder

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Combining different pharmaceuticals may be beneficial when treating disorders with complex neurobiology, including alcohol use disorder (AUD). The gut-brain peptides amylin and GLP-1 may be of potential interest as they individually reduce alcohol intake in rodents. While the combination of amylin receptor (AMYR) and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonists have been found to decrease feeding and body weight in obese male rats synergistically, their combined impact on alcohol intake is unknown. METHODS: Therefore, the effect of the combination of an AMYR (salmon calcitonin (sCT)) and a GLP-1R (dulaglutide) agonist on alcohol intake in rats of both sexes was explored in two separate alcohol-drinking experiments. The first alcohol-drinking experiment evaluated the potential of adding sCT to an ongoing dulaglutide treatment, whereas the second alcohol-drinking experiment examined the effect when adding sCT and dulaglutide simultaneously. RESULTS: When adding sCT to an ongoing dulaglutide treatment, a reduction in alcohol intake was observed in both male and female rats. However, when combining sCT and dulaglutide simultaneously, an initial reduction in alcohol intake was observed in rats of both sexes, whereas tolerance towards treatment was observed. In both alcohol-drinking experiments, this treatment combination consistently decreased food consumption and body weight in males and females. While the treatment combination did not affect inflammatory mediators, the gene expression of AMYR or GLP-1R, it changed fat tissue morphology. CONCLUSIONS: Further investigation needs to be done on the combination of AMYR and GLP-1R agonists to assess their combined effects on alcohol intake.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39639536 ↗