Feb 9, 2026 at 3:43 AM#6
Building on that last point about CNS receptor reserve — I think this is an underappreciated factor in the weight loss plateau discussion.
Hypothalamic GLP-1R-expressing neurons (particularly in the ARC and NTS) may have much lower receptor reserve than pancreatic β-cells. If desensitization reduces functional surface receptors below the threshold for maximal anorexigenic signaling, you'd see exactly the pattern observed clinically: robust initial appetite suppression that gradually attenuates.
The counter-argument is that the weight loss plateau could be purely metabolic (adaptive thermogenesis, reduced energy expenditure) rather than pharmacological (receptor desensitization). But I suspect both contribute.
One testable prediction: if CNS GLP-1R desensitization is a major contributor, then drug holidays should partially restore weight loss efficacy upon re-initiation. There's some anecdotal clinical evidence for this, but no controlled trials that I'm aware of.
> "Adaptive thermogenesis accounted for approximately 85 kcal/day reduction in energy expenditure in the semaglutide 2.4 mg group at 68 weeks, consistent with metabolic adaptation rather than pharmacological tolerance as the primary driver of the weight loss plateau."
> — Wilding et al., *New England Journal of Medicine*, 2021; 384:989–1002 (STEP 1 post-hoc analysis)
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