PMID-33320179 – Revisiting the Complexity of GLP-1 Action

PMID-33320179 – Revisiting the Complexity of GLP-1 Action

McLean BA, Wong CK, Campbell JE, et al. Revisiting the Complexity of GLP-1 Action-from Sites of Synthesis, to Receptor Activation, to Downstream Signaling. Endocrine Reviews, 2021;42(2):101-132.

Quick Reference

Property Value
PMID 33320179
DOI 10.1210/endrev/bnaa032
Year 2021
Journal Endocrine Reviews
Study Type Narrative Review
Evidence Level V
Sample N/A (comprehensive review)
Peptide(s) Studied Semaglutide

Key Findings

  • GLP-1 is produced primarily by intestinal L-cells and brainstem neurons; both sources contribute to metabolic regulation through distinct but overlapping pathways
  • GLP-1 receptor (GLP-1R) signaling involves cAMP-PKA, beta-arrestin, and biased agonism pathways, which may explain differential pharmacology among GLP-1 RAs
  • Appetite suppression by GLP-1 RAs is mediated primarily through central GLP-1R activation in the hypothalamus and brainstem, with peripheral vagal afferent signaling playing a supporting role
  • Cardiovascular benefits of GLP-1 RAs involve direct effects on cardiomyocytes, endothelial cells, and immune/inflammatory pathways, not solely mediated through weight loss or glycemic improvement
  • Anti-inflammatory actions of GLP-1R activation include reduced NF-kB signaling, decreased macrophage infiltration, and attenuation of atherosclerotic plaque inflammation
  • Gastric emptying deceleration is a significant contributor to postprandial glucose control but undergoes tachyphylaxis with sustained GLP-1 RA exposure

Study Design

Comprehensive narrative review synthesizing preclinical and clinical literature on GLP-1 biology, covering: biosynthesis and processing of proglucagon, sites of GLP-1 production, GLP-1 receptor structure and signaling cascades, physiological actions across organ systems (pancreas, brain, heart, GI tract, kidney, immune system), and pharmacological implications for GLP-1 RA development.

Limitations

  • Narrative review without systematic search methodology or quality assessment of included studies
  • Some mechanistic data derived from rodent models with uncertain human translatability
  • Published before SELECT trial results; cardiovascular discussion does not include obesity-specific CV outcome data
  • Does not cover dual/triple agonists (tirzepatide, retatrutide)

Clinical Relevance

This review serves as an essential mechanistic reference for understanding how semaglutide and other GLP-1 RAs exert their multi-organ effects. The discussion of biased agonism, central vs peripheral pathways, and anti-inflammatory mechanisms provides the scientific foundation for interpreting clinical trial results and understanding why GLP-1 RAs produce benefits beyond weight loss and glucose control.

Related

#research #narrative-review #semaglutide #evidence-level-V