Sep 21, 2024 at 8:56 AM#6
From a clinical pharmacology standpoint, I want to highlight something about tirzepatide's receptor selectivity that's often overlooked.
Tirzepatide is NOT a balanced dual agonist. It's actually 5x more potent at GIPR than GLP-1R:
- GIPR: EC₅₀ = 0.15 nM (comparable to native GIP)
- GLP-1R: EC₅₀ = 0.52 nM (approximately 50-fold weaker than native GLP-1)
> "Tirzepatide exhibited full agonist activity at GIPR (Emax 97%, EC₅₀ 0.15 nM) but partial agonist activity at GLP-1R (Emax 79%, EC₅₀ 0.52 nM relative to native GLP-1), suggesting that GIPR agonism is the dominant pharmacological activity."
> — Willard et al., *Nature*, 2020; 587:560–564
So tirzepatide is really a GIP agonist with ancillary GLP-1 activity, not the other way around. Combined with the biased agonism at GLP-1R discussed in the other thread, the pharmacological profile is: strong GIPR agonism + moderate, Gs-biased GLP-1R agonism.
This implies that the superior weight loss may derive more from robust GIPR pathway engagement than from stronger GLP-1R signaling. Which brings us back to the question: what does GIPR do in the CNS for weight regulation?
23 3LeilaHI, marcus_mpls, DeniseRN_TPA and 20 others
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