The glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor sits at the centre of contemporary metabolic research. This article gives a working overview of the receptor, the single, dual and triple agonist research peptides currently in widespread use, and the experimental questions each is best suited to address.

The receptor

GLP-1R is a class B G-protein-coupled receptor expressed primarily in pancreatic β-cells, intestinal L-cells, the central nervous system (notably the area postrema and arcuate nucleus), the heart and the kidneys. Its endogenous ligand, GLP-1(7–36) amide, is secreted from L-cells in response to nutrient ingestion and has a half-life of 1–2 minutes due to rapid cleavage by dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4).

Activation drives Gαs–cAMP signalling, downstream PKA and Epac activity, and — pharmacologically — β-cell glucose-dependent insulin secretion, suppression of glucagon, slowed gastric emptying, and central reduction of food intake.

The pharmacology problem

The endogenous peptide is too short-lived for clinical or chronic-research use. Research peptides solve this through:

  1. DPP-4 resistance — substitution of Ala-2 with α-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) blocks DPP-4 cleavage.
  2. Albumin binding — fatty-acid acylation (a C16 or C18 chain via a γGlu/2×OEG linker) extends half-life from minutes to days.
  3. Receptor co-engagement — adding agonism at GIP and/or glucagon receptors broadens metabolic effect.

The research-relevant peptides

Semaglutide

A long-acting GLP-1 mono-agonist with Aib²-substitution and a C18 fatty diacid chain attached at Lys²⁶. Half-life ~165 hours in human; in research models, suitable for once-weekly dosing paradigms. Used for:

  • β-cell function studies.
  • Central appetite regulation.
  • Hepatic steatosis models.
  • Cardiovascular outcome research.

Semaglutide product page.

Tirzepatide

A dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist on a single 39-residue scaffold. Greater weight-loss efficacy than semaglutide in head-to-head pre-clinical work; the GIP component contributes to lipid metabolism beyond GLP-1 alone. Useful when distinguishing GLP-1-only from GIP-augmented effects.

Tirzepatide product page.

Retatrutide

A triple GIP / GLP-1 / glucagon receptor agonist. The glucagon component adds direct hepatic energy expenditure to the GLP-1/GIP-driven appetite and insulinotropic effects. Primarily of interest in obesity and NASH research models where increased basal energy expenditure is a desired endpoint.

Retatrutide product page.

Cagrilintide

An amylin analogue, not a GLP-1 agonist, but co-administered with semaglutide in many recent metabolic studies (the “CagriSema” combination). Acts at the amylin and calcitonin receptors to suppress gastric emptying and food intake by a parallel mechanism.

Cagrilintide product page.

Choosing between them

QuestionMost informative peptide
Is the effect GLP-1-receptor-mediated only?Semaglutide
Does GIP co-agonism add to the GLP-1 effect?Tirzepatide vs semaglutide
Does glucagon agonism add hepatic energy expenditure?Retatrutide vs tirzepatide
Is the appetite effect dependent on amylin signalling?Semaglutide ± cagrilintide
Is DPP-4 resistance sufficient or is acylation also required for the model timescale?Aib²-only analogue vs acylated analogue

Methodological notes

  • Reconstitution. All four peptides reconstitute readily in bacteriostatic water at 2–10 mg/mL. Avoid PBS at high concentration — visible cloudiness can occur.
  • Half-life in animal models. Mouse and rat clearance is faster than human; published dose translation tables differ by 5–20× between species.
  • Receptor selectivity. When working in a primary tissue, confirm receptor expression by qPCR or IHC before attributing an effect to GLP-1R; off-target effects at GIPR and GCGR are non-trivial for tirzepatide and retatrutide.

Cross-references

glp-1metabolicsemaglutidetirzepatideretatrutide