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Short-term liraglutide modulates proteins in obesity, showing weight-independent effects and myostatin suppressionCould a weight-loss drug work by changing your body's proteins?

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Key Takeaway
Interpret short-term liraglutide proteomic data cautiously; clinical relevance requires larger trials.

A 5-week randomized controlled trial compared liraglutide 3 mg daily to placebo in 20 adults with obesity. The study examined proteomic effects rather than clinical outcomes. Liraglutide significantly modulated 124 proteins, with 57 proteins showing false discovery rate < 0.05. Notably, 85% of these protein effects persisted after statistical adjustment for weight loss, suggesting weight-independent mechanisms. Myostatin was strongly suppressed with a log₂ fold change of -0.41 (p = 1.7 × 10). Liraglutide showed 70-75% directional overlap with the proteomic signature of semaglutide, and a semaglutide-based classifier distinguished liraglutide from placebo with AUC = 0.82 (sensitivity 0.89, specificity 0.60). Proteins downregulated by liraglutide were genetically linked to coronary artery disease and type 2 diabetes (FDR < 0.05). Safety, tolerability, and adverse events were not reported. Key limitations include the short 5-week duration, small sample size of 20 participants, and focus on proteomic biomarkers without assessment of clinical endpoints like weight loss or cardiometabolic parameters. The study provides mechanistic insights into potential weight-independent pathways of GLP-1 receptor agonists but does not establish clinical efficacy or safety. Funding and conflicts of interest were not reported.

We often think of weight-loss drugs as just helping you shed pounds. But what if they're doing something more fundamental inside your body? A small, short-term study offers a clue. Researchers gave 20 adults with obesity either liraglutide or a placebo for five weeks and looked at the proteins in their blood. They found that liraglutide significantly changed the levels of 124 different proteins. Crucially, 85% of these protein changes persisted even after accounting for weight loss, suggesting the drug might have effects beyond just lowering the number on the scale. One protein that was strongly suppressed is called myostatin, which is known to regulate muscle. The pattern of protein changes also overlapped significantly with those seen with another similar drug, semaglutide. Some of the proteins that went down are genetically linked to a higher risk of coronary artery disease and type 2 diabetes. This is a fascinating early snapshot of biology, but it's important to keep perspective. The study was very small and lasted only five weeks. It measured proteins, not whether people actually had fewer heart attacks or better blood sugar control. It shows us a potential 'signature' of how the drug works, but it doesn't prove it causes long-term health benefits.

What this means for you:
A short-term study shows liraglutide changes body proteins in ways that may go beyond weight loss.

Study Details

Study typeRct
EvidenceLevel 2
Follow-up0.7 mo
PublishedApr 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
BACKGROUND: Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) exert cardiometabolic benefits beyond weight loss, yet their systemic proteomic mechanisms remain incompletely defined. We profiled short-term liraglutide-induced protein changes and compared them with published semaglutide signatures. METHODS: In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial (NCT02944500), 20 adults with obesity received liraglutide 3 mg daily or placebo for 5 weeks, separated by a 3-week washout. Plasma and serum samples underwent SomaScan v4.1 profiling of 6249 proteins. Mixed-effects models tested Time×Treatment interactions with and without weight adjustment. Results were benchmarked against the 30-protein semaglutide STEP 1/2 signature. RESULTS: Liraglutide significantly modulated 124 proteins (57 FDR < 0.05); 85 % of effects persisted after weight adjustment, indicating largely weight-independent actions. Upregulated proteins included pancreatic enzymes (PNLIP, CTRB1/2, PRSS2), while endothelial and fibrotic markers (ACE, NOS3, FAP) were downregulated. Myostatin (MSTN) was strongly suppressed (log₂ fold change -0.41; p = 1.7 × 10), with concurrent rises in its inhibitors WFIKKN2 and BMPR1A. Liraglutide shared 70-75 % directional overlap with semaglutide, with 25-30 % unique effects enriched in vascular, neurodevelopmental, and musculoskeletal pathways. A semaglutide-based classifier distinguished liraglutide from placebo (AUC = 0.82; sensitivity 0.89; specificity 0.60). Downregulated proteins were genetically linked to coronary artery disease and type 2 diabetes (FDR < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Short-term liraglutide reproduces the core GLP-1RA proteomic fingerprint while uniquely suppressing myostatin and vascular remodeling pathways. These rapid, largely weight-independent molecular responses indicate early cardioprotective and myostatin-inhibitor signaling changes that could be relevant for future muscle-preserving strategies, supporting individualized GLP-1RA use beyond weight loss alone.
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