Quick Comparison

AmycretinGLP-1
Half-LifeApproximately 168 hours (7 days) for the subcutaneous formulation1-2 minutes
Typical DosageClinical trials (subcutaneous): doses up to 20 mg once weekly with stepwise escalation over 12-16 weeks. Oral formulation: doses up to 100 mg once daily. Dosing protocols still being optimised in Phase 3.Not used therapeutically due to extremely short half-life. Research: continuous intravenous infusion at variable rates. All approved GLP-1 therapies use modified analogues with extended half-lives instead.
AdministrationSubcutaneous injection (once weekly) and oral formulation (once daily) in developmentSubcutaneous injection or intravenous infusion
Research Papers5 papers32 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

Amycretin

Amycretin is a unimolecular co-agonist that simultaneously activates both the GLP-1 receptor and the amylin (AMY) receptor — the first peptide engineered to combine these two complementary satiety pathways in a single molecule rather than as a two-drug combination. The design philosophy is to deliver the additive weight-loss benefit demonstrated by CagriSema (semaglutide + cagrilintide) without the manufacturing, dosing, and patient-acceptance complexities of co-formulating two separate drugs.

The GLP-1 component drives appetite suppression centrally through hypothalamic POMC/CART activation and NPY/AgRP inhibition, slows gastric emptying via vagal signalling, and stimulates glucose-dependent insulin secretion from pancreatic beta cells. The amylin component activates calcitonin-receptor/RAMP heterodimer complexes concentrated in the area postrema and nucleus tractus solitarius — brainstem regions outside the blood-brain barrier that form a parallel satiety circuit reducing meal size and food-seeking behaviour through neuroanatomically distinct pathways.

Because GLP-1 and amylin signal through different receptor families and target different neurons in the appetite control network, their effects are additive rather than redundant. Phase 1b/2a data showed up to 22% body weight reduction at 36 weeks for the subcutaneous form — comparable to CagriSema with a simpler one-molecule profile. A particularly notable feature is the parallel development of an oral formulation, which would be the first oral peptide combination therapy for obesity if approved. Novo Nordisk's branded development name is zenagamtide, and the molecule is positioned as the company's strategic answer to retatrutide and tirzepatide.

GLP-1

GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide 1) is the native incretin hormone produced by enteroendocrine L-cells in the distal small intestine and colon in response to nutrient ingestion. It is the endogenous molecule that all GLP-1 receptor agonist drugs (semaglutide, liraglutide, etc.) are designed to mimic. Understanding native GLP-1 is essential to understanding the entire drug class built upon its biology.

Upon release, GLP-1 binds to GLP-1 receptors (GLP-1R) — G protein-coupled receptors expressed on pancreatic beta cells, the GI tract, the heart, the kidneys, and critically, the brain. In the pancreas, GLP-1R activation stimulates adenylyl cyclase, raising intracellular cAMP levels, which potentiates glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. This glucose-dependence is a key safety feature — GLP-1 only promotes insulin release when blood sugar is elevated, minimizing hypoglycemia risk. Simultaneously, GLP-1 suppresses glucagon secretion from alpha cells, further reducing hepatic glucose output.

In the brain, GLP-1 receptors in the hypothalamus (arcuate nucleus, paraventricular nucleus) and brainstem (area postrema, nucleus tractus solitarius) mediate appetite suppression and satiety. GLP-1 also activates vagal afferents to slow gastric emptying, prolonging nutrient absorption and post-meal satiety. The critical limitation of native GLP-1 is its extremely rapid degradation by the enzyme dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4), which cleaves the first two amino acids within 1-2 minutes, rendering it inactive. This ultra-short half-life is why pharmaceutical GLP-1 analogues require structural modifications (albumin binding, DPP-4 resistance) to achieve clinically useful durations of action.

Risks & Safety

Amycretin

Common

nausea (similar in frequency to semaglutide and tirzepatide, around 30-45% in trials), vomiting, decreased appetite, diarrhea, constipation, injection site reactions for the SC form.

Serious

pancreatitis, gallstones, dehydration-related kidney issues, possible loss of muscle mass alongside fat.

Rare

thyroid C-cell tumour signal seen in animal studies of GLP-1 class drugs, severe allergic reactions. Long-term safety still being established.

GLP-1

Common

nausea and vomiting at higher doses.

Serious

dangerously low blood sugar if combined with insulin or diabetes medications.

Rare

allergic reactions.

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