Feb 6, 2026 at 3:54 AM#1
Following up on the desensitization thread, I want to dive deep into biased agonism at GLP-1R. This concept is transforming how we think about drug design for incretin-based therapies.
Background for those new to the concept:
Traditional pharmacology viewed receptor activation as a single "on/off" switch. Biased agonism recognizes that different ligands can stabilize distinct receptor conformations that preferentially activate one signaling pathway over another. At GLP-1R, the two primary pathways are:
1. Gαs → adenylyl cyclase → cAMP → PKA/Epac2 (insulin secretion, β-cell survival, appetite suppression)
2. β-arrestin-1/2 → ERK1/2, receptor internalization (potentially: β-cell proliferation, but also desensitization)
> "Quantification of ligand bias at GLP-1R using the operational model of agonism revealed that exendin-P5, a modified exendin-4 analog, exhibited 45-fold bias toward Gαs over β-arrestin-2 recruitment compared to GLP-1(7-36)amide."
> — Wootten et al., *Journal of Biological Chemistry*, 2013; 288(51):36338–36348
The clinical question: would a strongly Gs-biased GLP-1R agonist be a better drug?
18 1DebRD_ATL, KristenIndy, MarkLI_maint and 15 others
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