🍪 CompoundTalk uses cookies to improve your experience, analyze traffic, and personalize content. By continuing to use this site, you agree to our Cookie Policy.
Evidence-based GLP-1 & peptide discussion since 2023
ForumsPharmacology & MechanismsBiased agonism at GLP-1R — what worked for you?

Biased agonism at GLP-1R — what worked for you?

KarenAZ_mom Mon, Oct 27, 2025 at 7:21 AM 13 replies 1,056 viewsPage 1 of 3
KarenAZ_mom
Member
567
2,567
Aug 2024
Scottsdale, AZ
Oct 27, 2025 at 8:46 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?
4 11anna.melb_AU, mark_tokyo, hans_munich and 1 other
Reply Quote Save Share Report
B12Beth
Member
289
890
Oct 2024
Maryland
Oct 27, 2025 at 9:03 AM#2
This is where I think the structure-function data becomes really illuminating. Cryo-EM structures of GLP-1R bound to different agonists show that the intracellular face of the receptor adopts subtly different conformations depending on the ligand. Key structural determinants of bias at GLP-1R: TM6 outward movement — the magnitude of TM6 displacement correlates with Gαs coupling efficiency. Exendin-P5 (Gs-biased) induces a 14.2 Å outward shift vs. 11.8 Å for GLP-1 and 10.3 Å for oxyntomodulin. ICL2 helix formation — the intracellular loop 2 adopts an α-helical conformation that is critical for G protein coupling. β-arrestin-biased ligands tend to destabilize this helix. > "Cryo-EM structures of GLP-1R-Gs complexes bound to biased agonists revealed that Gs-biased ligands stabilize an extended TM6 outward conformation and a structured ICL2 α-helix, whereas β-arrestin-biased ligands promote TM7-Helix 8 rearrangements." > — Liang et al., *Nature*, 2020; 583:141–146 ICL3 positioning — this loop is the primary GRK substrate. Ligands that position ICL3 closer to the membrane reduce GRK accessibility and thus β-arrestin recruitment. One thing I find remarkable is how sensitive bias is to single amino acid substitutions in the peptide ligand. Changing position 2 of exendin-4 (Gly → D-Ala) shifts the bias profile dramatically.
Last edited: Oct 27, 2025 at 12:03 PM
50 10carl_compliance, DanielChem_CHI, marco_milano and 47 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
wei_SG
Member
234
890
Nov 2024
Singapore, SG
Oct 27, 2025 at 9:20 AM#3
The functional consequences in β-cells are where this gets really interesting (and complicated). I want to push back slightly on the notion that Gs-biased = always better. Here's why: β-arrestin signaling at GLP-1R isn't just about desensitization. β-arrestin-1 scaffolds an ERK1/2 signaling complex that promotes β-cell proliferation and survival through Bad phosphorylation. Eliminate β-arrestin signaling entirely, and you might lose some of the disease-modifying (β-cell mass preservation) effects. > "β-arrestin-1 knockout mice exhibited normal acute insulin secretory responses to GLP-1R agonism but showed 35% reduced β-cell mass expansion during high-fat diet challenge compared to wild-type controls, indicating a β-arrestin-dependent trophic mechanism." > — Zhu et al., *Cell Metabolism*, 2017; 25(5):1092–1104 So the ideal therapeutic profile might be moderately Gs-biased, not maximally. You want enough β-arrestin engagement for trophic effects, but not so much that desensitization limits acute efficacy. This is analogous to the situation at the μ-opioid receptor, where extreme G protein bias (oliceridine/TRV130) reduced respiratory depression but the clinical advantage was more modest than animal data predicted.
Last edited: Oct 27, 2025 at 10:20 AM
37 13Dr.MetabolicMD, RetaRick_CA, JenPlateau and 34 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report

Janoshik Analytical — Independent Testing

Trusted third-party HPLC & mass spectrometry analysis. Verify peptide purity with the lab the community relies on. Independent. Accurate. Transparent.

Verify Your Peptides
nick_SD_fit
Member
278
1,234
Sep 2024
San Diego, CA
Oct 27, 2025 at 9:37 AM#4
Excellent counterpoint. The μ-opioid receptor parallel is instructive. TRV130 showed beautiful preclinical bias but the Phase 3 clinical advantage was marginal, partly because the bias factor measured in recombinant systems doesn't always translate to native tissue contexts. For GLP-1R, there's an additional complication: system bias or observational bias. The apparent bias of a ligand depends enormously on: - The cell type (HEK293 vs. INS-1 vs. primary islets) - The expression level of GLP-1R - The stoichiometry of GRKs, G proteins, and β-arrestins - The assay readout and timepoint > "Bias factors calculated for GLP-1R agonists varied by up to 30-fold depending on the cellular background, with exendin-P5 showing 45-fold Gs bias in HEK293 cells but only 8-fold bias in INS-1 832/13 cells." > — Wootten et al., *Molecular Pharmacology*, 2018; 93(5):504–514 This is the "system bias" problem — what matters is the bias in the therapeutically relevant tissue, not in an engineered cell line. And we don't have great tools for measuring bias in native human β-cells or hypothalamic neurons in vivo.
43 24PharmacoVig_BOS, SurmountFan_IN, PeptideChemSF and 40 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
roxy_nash
Member
178
890
Dec 2024
Nashville, TN
Oct 27, 2025 at 9:54 AM#5
From a medicinal chemistry perspective, engineering bias into GLP-1 peptide analogs is both fascinating and challenging. Let me outline the key structure-bias relationships we know: Position 2 (Aib substitution): Replacing Ala² with α-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) in GLP-1 analogs enhances DPP-4 resistance AND shifts toward Gs bias. This is because the bulky gem-dimethyl group restricts backbone flexibility, favoring the receptor conformation for Gs coupling. Position 8 (Glu → Lys): Charge reversal at position 8 selectively reduces β-arrestin recruitment by ~60% without affecting cAMP potency. C-terminal truncations: Removing residues 30-37 from GLP-1 selectively impairs β-arrestin recruitment more than Gs coupling (approximately 5-fold bias toward Gs). > "Systematic alanine scanning of GLP-1(7-36)amide identified residues His7, Gly10, Phe12, and Asp15 as critical for Gs coupling, while Glu21, Lys26, and Ile29 were selectively required for β-arrestin-2 recruitment, providing a structural roadmap for biased agonist design." > — Wootten et al., *Journal of Medicinal Chemistry*, 2016; 59(7):3325–3338 The big question for drug development: can we achieve clinically meaningful bias in a molecule that also has the pharmacokinetic properties needed for once-weekly dosing? The fatty acid acylation that gives semaglutide its long half-life also alters receptor binding geometry and could affect bias.
32 9kim_atl_prep, sarah_TO, wendy_avl and 29 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report

Similar Threads

GLP-1R desensitization — β-arrestin-mediated internalization18 replies
Biased agonism at GLP-1R — Gs vs β-arrestin signaling balance13 replies
Semaglutide albumin binding and the C-18 fatty acid linker17 replies
GIP receptor pharmacology — why GIP agonism enhances GLP-113 replies
Glucagon receptor signaling — hepatic glycogenolysis and lipolysis16 replies
ForumsNewTrendingMembersAccount

Log In

Forgot password?
No account? Register