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Proteomic changes upon treatment with semaglutide in individuals with obesity.

Nat Med · 2025

Last updated 2026-05-28

In two large studies with 1,311 and 645 adults who had overweight or obesity (some with type 2 diabetes), researchers found that the drug semaglutide changed levels of many proteins in the blood. These changes were linked to processes like body weight, blood sugar control, fat metabolism, and inflammation, even after accounting for weight loss and blood sugar improvements. The drug also lowered proteins tied to heart disease risk, supporting its reported benefits for heart health.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNat Med, 2025
Citations41
Relative citation ratio15.24
Molecules semaglutide
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

Obesity and type 2 diabetes are prevalent chronic diseases effectively managed by semaglutide. Here we studied the effects of semaglutide on the circulating proteome using baseline and end-of-treatment serum samples from two phase 3 trials in participants with overweight or obesity, with or without diabetes: STEP 1 (n = 1,311) and STEP 2 (n = 645). We identified evidence supporting broad effects of semaglutide, implicating processes related to body weight regulation, glycemic control, lipid metabolism and inflammatory pathways. Several proteins were regulated with semaglutide, after accounting for changes in body weight and HbA at end of trial, suggesting effects of semaglutide on the proteome beyond weight loss and glucose lowering. A comparison of semaglutide with real-world proteomic profiles revealed potential benefits on disease-specific proteomic signatures including the downregulation of specific proteins associated with cardiovascular disease risk, supporting its reported effects of lowering cardiovascular disease risk and potential drug repurposing opportunities. This study showcases the potential of proteomics data gathered from randomized trials for providing insights into disease mechanisms and drug repurposing opportunities. These data also highlight the unmet need for, and importance of, examining proteomic changes in response to weight loss pharmacotherapy in future trials.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39753963 ↗

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