GLPwatch

GLP-1 and the Neurobiology of Eating Control: Recent Advances.

Endocrinology · 2025

Last updated 2026-05-28

GLP-1 drugs are a newer type of medication for obesity that help people lose more weight than older options by reducing food intake. These drugs work by activating GLP-1 receptors in the brain, though scientists are still studying exactly how they affect eating behavior. Recent trials show significant weight loss, and real-world use is beginning to confirm these results.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalEndocrinology, 2025
Citations18
Relative citation ratio7.20
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity, Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Obesity is now considered a chronic relapsing progressive disease, associated with increased all-cause mortality that scales with body weight, affecting more than 1 billion people worldwide. Excess body fat is strongly associated with excess energy intake, and most successful anti-obesity medications (AOMs) counter this positive energy balance through the suppression of eating to drive weight loss. Historically, AOMs have been characterized by modest weight loss and side effects which are compliance-limiting, and in some cases life-threatening. However, the field of obesity pharmacotherapy has now entered a new era of AOMs based on analogues of the gut hormone and neuropeptide glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1). The latest versions of these drugs elicit unprecedented levels of weight loss in clinical trials, which are now starting to be substantiated in real-world usage. Notably, these drugs reduce weight primarily by reducing energy intake, via activation of the GLP-1 receptor on multiple sites of action primarily in the central nervous system, although the most relevant sites of action, and the neural circuits recruited remain contentious. Here we provide a targeted synthesis of recent developments in the field of GLP-1 neurobiology, highlighting studies which have advanced our understanding of how GLP-1 signaling modulates eating, and identify open questions and future challenges we believe still need to be addressed to aid the prevention and/or treatment of obesity.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39813121 ↗