Oct 27, 2025 at 10:11 AM#6
I want to bring in the clinical pharmacology perspective. Even if we achieve perfect Gs-biased agonism, we need to consider whether the clinical endpoints actually segregate along the Gs vs. β-arrestin axis.
Here's what we think each pathway contributes clinically:
Gs-dependent effects:
- Acute glucose-dependent insulin secretion
- Glucagon suppression
- Gastric emptying delay
- Central appetite suppression (likely — NTS/hypothalamic cAMP)
- Cardioprotection (endothelial NO, anti-inflammatory)
β-arrestin-dependent effects:
- β-cell proliferation/survival (ERK1/2 pathway)
- Receptor internalization/desensitization
- Possibly some anti-inflammatory effects via NFκB scaffolding
If the primary clinical goals are glycemic control + weight loss + cardiovascular protection, these are predominantly Gs-mediated. The β-cell preservation effect is important but operates on a longer timescale.
> "In a head-to-head comparison of Gs-biased versus balanced GLP-1R agonists in diabetic cynomolgus monkeys, the biased agonist achieved equivalent HbA1c reduction with 40% less nausea (as measured by kaolin consumption), suggesting that some GI side effects may be β-arrestin-mediated."
> — Griffith et al., *Diabetes*, 2019; 68(Supplement 1):Abstract 81-OR
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