Background: Exogenous glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) inhibits eating in healthy, overweight, and diabetic subjects.
Objective: The GLP-1 receptor antagonist exendin(9-39)NH2 (ex9-39) was used to further explore the role of GLP-1 as an endogenous satiation signal.
Design: Two double-blind, 4-way crossover studies were performed, each of which included 10 healthy men. In study A, subjects received an intravenous infusion of ex9-39 or saline plus an oral glucose preload and an intraduodenal infusion of saline or glucose for 60 min. In study B, intravenous infusions were identical, but an oral mixed-liquid meal preload and a 60-min intraduodenal infusion of saline or oleic acid were administered. Thirty minutes after oral preloads, subjects ate and drank ad libitum, and amounts ingested and the time to meal completion were quantified. In addition, appetite and plasma GLP-1, peptide YY (PYY), insulin, glucagon, and blood glucose concentrations were measured.
Results: In both studies, GLP-1, PYY, and glucagon were substantially higher with intravenous ex9-39 than with intravenous saline (P ≤ 0.001). Insulin was lower with intravenous ex9-39 during intraduodenal glucose (P ≤ 0.05). The decrease in prospective food consumption and desire to eat during ad libitum eating after glucose ingestion was slightly attenuated (P ≤ 0.05 and P ≤ 0.01, respectively) with ex9-39. However, with intravenous ex9-39, food and fluid intakes and eating duration were not changed in either study.
Conclusions: GLP-1 receptor antagonism slightly modulates appetite during ad libitum eating, but food and fluid intakes and meal duration remain unchanged, suggesting that endogenous GLP-1 is a weak satiation signal. However, concomitant substantial increases in plasma PYY and glucagon may counteract a desatiating effect of ex9-39. The effect of ex9-39 on PYY secretion supports an autoinhibitory feedback mechanism that controls L cell secretion; the effect on insulin and glucagon confirms the role of GLP-1 in glycemic control through its action on pancreatic α and β cells.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3945/ajcn.114.083246 | DOI Listing |
Neuropharmacology
November 2023
Gubra ApS, Hørsholm Kongevej 11B, 2970, Hørsholm, Denmark. Electronic address:
Peptide-based drug development for CNS disorders is challenged by poor blood-brain barrier (BBB) penetrability of peptides. While acylation protractions (lipidation) have been successfully applied to increase circulating half-life of therapeutic peptides, little is known about the CNS accessibility of lipidated peptide drugs. Light-sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM) has emerged as a powerful method to visualize whole-brain 3D distribution of fluorescently labelled therapeutic peptides at single-cell resolution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetes Obes Metab
October 2018
St. Clara Research Ltd, Basel, Switzerland.
Aims: Peripheral infusion of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) can affect brain activity in areas involved in the regulation of appetite, including hypothalamic and reward-related brain regions. In contrast, the physiological role of endogenous GLP-1 in the central regulation of appetite has hardly been investigated.
Materials And Methods: This was a randomized, cross-over trial that involved 12 healthy volunteers who received an intragastric (ig) glucose (gluc) load, with or without intravenous (iv) exendin9-39 (ex9-39; specific GLP-1 receptor antagonist).
Peptides
May 2016
Department of Clinical Sciences, Medicine, Lund University, Sölvegatan 19, 22184 Lund, Sweden.
The incretin hormones, glucose dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) and glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1), potentiate insulin secretion and are responsible for the majority of insulin secretion that occurs after a meal. They may also, however, have a fundamental role in pancreatic beta cell development and function, independently of their role in potentiating insulin secretion after a meal. This has led to observations that a loss of GIP or GLP-1 action affects normal beta cell function, however each one of the incretin hormones may compensate when the action of the other is lost and therefore the overall impact of the incretin hormones on beta cell function is not known.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Clin Nutr
August 2014
From the Department of Biomedicine and Division of Gastroenterology, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland (RES, ACM-G, PK, HF, FS, and CB), and the Department of Internal Medicine II, Clinical Research Unit, Clinical Center of the Ludwig Maximilians University, Campus Grosshardern, Munich, Germany (JS and BG).
Background: Exogenous glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) inhibits eating in healthy, overweight, and diabetic subjects.
Objective: The GLP-1 receptor antagonist exendin(9-39)NH2 (ex9-39) was used to further explore the role of GLP-1 as an endogenous satiation signal.
Design: Two double-blind, 4-way crossover studies were performed, each of which included 10 healthy men.
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