Great questions. I'll try to be thorough since you've got the background for it.
GIP Receptor Agonism β What it adds:
GIP (glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide) was historically called "gastric inhibitory polypeptide" and was considered an incretin that mainly potentiated insulin secretion. But GIP receptors are expressed far more broadly than originally appreciated:
- Adipose tissue: GIP receptors on adipocytes regulate lipid storage, lipolysis, and adipose tissue blood flow. GIP agonism appears to improve adipose tissue "health" β promoting proper lipid storage and reducing ectopic fat deposition (liver, visceral, intramuscular). This is likely why tirz shows superior triglyceride and liver fat reductions compared to sema.
- CNS: GIPR expression in the hypothalamus (particularly the ARC and PVN) modulates feeding behavior through pathways that are partially distinct from GLP-1R signaling. The net effect: GIP and GLP-1 suppress appetite through complementary but non-identical neuronal circuits.
- Pancreatic Ξ²-cells: Both GIP and GLP-1 are incretins that potentiate glucose-dependent insulin secretion, but through distinct intracellular signaling cascades (cAMP/PKA vs cAMP/Epac2 predominance). Dual agonism provides more robust insulin secretion improvement than either alone.
- Bone: GIP has anabolic effects on bone metabolism (stimulates osteoblast activity). This may partially offset the bone density concerns with weight loss.
The GIP Paradox:
You're right that this was controversial. In obesity, GIP signaling is dysregulated β obese individuals have blunted GIP responses and some researchers hypothesized that GIP PROMOTED fat storage (the "thrifty" hypothesis). This led to the counterintuitive prediction that GIP antagonism might be anti-obesity.
Amgen actually developed a GIPR antagonist (AMG-133, now maridebart cafraglutide) that combined GIP antagonism with GLP-1 agonism. It also showed significant weight loss in early trials.
The current understanding is that the system is more nuanced β chronic pharmacological GIP agonism at supraphysiological levels (as with tirzepatide) may actually desensitize/downregulate GIPR in a way that produces net effects similar to antagonism in peripheral tissues while maintaining agonist effects centrally. This is the "functional selectivity" or "biased agonism" hypothesis.
Synergy vs Additive:
The evidence points toward genuine synergy, not just additive effects. In preclinical models, dual GIP/GLP-1 agonism produces weight loss greater than the sum of either agonist alone. The proposed mechanism involves:
- GIP-mediated enhancement of GLP-1 receptor sensitivity (cross-receptor potentiation)
- Complementary effects on gastric emptying (GLP-1 slows it, GIP modulates acid/enzyme secretion)
- Convergent but distinct CNS appetite suppression pathways creating a more "complete" satiety signal
Finan et al. (2013) in Nature Medicine was the landmark paper that first demonstrated this synergistic effect with a dual agonist peptide, which eventually led to tirzepatide's development at Lilly.1
1 Finan B, et al. "A rationally designed monomeric peptide triagonist corrects obesity and diabetes in rodents." Nat Med. 2015;21(1):27-36.