Semaglutide lowers body weight in rodents via distributed neural pathways.
JCI Insight · 2020
Last updated 2026-05-28In rodent studies, the GLP-1 drug semaglutide reduced food intake and body weight without lowering energy use, while also improving blood sugar control. The drug reached specific brain areas linked to appetite and reward, activating 10 different brain regions, including those involved in meal termination. Researchers found changes in brain activity and gene expression that may explain how semaglutide affects weight loss through multiple pathways.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | JCI Insight, 2020 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 549 |
| Relative citation ratio | 30.50 |
| NIH percentile | 100 |
| Molecules | semaglutide |
| Conditions studied | Obesity |
Abstract
Semaglutide, a glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) analog, induces weight loss, lowers glucose levels, and reduces cardiovascular risk in patients with diabetes. Mechanistic preclinical studies suggest weight loss is mediated through GLP-1 receptors (GLP-1Rs) in the brain. The findings presented here show that semaglutide modulated food preference, reduced food intake, and caused weight loss without decreasing energy expenditure. Semaglutide directly accessed the brainstem, septal nucleus, and hypothalamus but did not cross the blood-brain barrier; it interacted with the brain through the circumventricular organs and several select sites adjacent to the ventricles. Semaglutide induced central c-Fos activation in 10 brain areas, including hindbrain areas directly targeted by semaglutide, and secondary areas without direct GLP-1R interaction, such as the lateral parabrachial nucleus. Automated analysis of semaglutide access, c-Fos activity, GLP-1R distribution, and brain connectivity revealed that activation may involve meal termination controlled by neurons in the lateral parabrachial nucleus. Transcriptomic analysis of microdissected brain areas from semaglutide-treated rats showed upregulation of prolactin-releasing hormone and tyrosine hydroxylase in the area postrema. We suggest semaglutide lowers body weight by direct interaction with diverse GLP-1R populations and by directly and indirectly affecting the activity of neural pathways involved in food intake, reward, and energy expenditure.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 32213703 ↗
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