I've been digging into the literature on glucagon's thermogenic effects and wanted to start a discussion specifically about whether the GCG receptor agonism in drugs like retatrutide and survodutide is genuinely increasing energy expenditure in humans, or if this is still mostly a preclinical finding that's being over-extrapolated.
The preclinical evidence is strong:
- Glucagon infusion increases oxygen consumption in rodent models by 10-20%[1]
- GCG receptor agonism activates brown adipose tissue (BAT) thermogenesis via FGF21 induction[2]
- Glucagon increases hepatic fatty acid oxidation, generating heat as a byproduct
But the human evidence is more nuanced:
- Acute glucagon infusion in humans increases REE by approximately 5-8% (not 10-20% as in rodents)[3]
- Humans have significantly less BAT than rodents, so BAT-mediated thermogenesis may be less relevant
- Chronic glucagon exposure may lead to receptor desensitization, potentially blunting the thermogenic effect over time
The question: is the GCG component's real contribution to retatrutide's efficacy mainly about liver fat oxidation and satiety, with thermogenesis being a minor bonus? Or is the thermogenic effect genuinely adding a meaningful extra 100-200 kcal/day to the energy deficit?
[1] Billington CJ, et al. Glucagon in physiological concentrations stimulates brown fat thermogenesis in vivo. Am J Physiol. 1991.
[2] Habegger KM, et al. The metabolic actions of glucagon revisited. Nat Rev Endocrinol. 2010;6:689-697.
[3] Salem V, et al. Glucagon increases energy expenditure independently of brown adipose tissue activation in humans. Diabetes Obes Metab. 2016;18(1):72-81.