Quick Comparison

AmycretinLiraglutide
Half-LifeApproximately 168 hours (7 days) for the subcutaneous formulation13 hours
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.Diabetes (Victoza): 0.6 mg subcutaneous once daily for 1 week, then 1.2-1.8 mg once daily. Weight loss (Saxenda): 0.6 mg subcutaneous once daily, titrating by 0.6 mg weekly to target dose of 3.0 mg once daily. Injected once daily at any time, with or without food.
AdministrationSubcutaneous injection (once weekly) and oral formulation (once daily) in developmentSubcutaneous injection (daily)
Research Papers5 papers30 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.

Liraglutide

Liraglutide is a GLP-1 receptor agonist with 97% amino acid homology to native human GLP-1(7-37), modified by a single amino acid substitution (Lys34Arg) and attachment of a C16 palmitoyl fatty acid chain to Lys26 via a glutamic acid spacer. This acylation is the key pharmacological modification — the C16 fatty acid chain non-covalently binds to serum albumin after injection, creating an albumin-bound depot that is slowly released, extending the half-life from 1-2 minutes (native GLP-1) to approximately 13 hours. The acylation also confers resistance to DPP-4 enzymatic degradation.

Liraglutide activates the GLP-1 receptor (GLP-1R), a Gs-coupled GPCR expressed in pancreatic beta cells, the hypothalamus, the gastrointestinal tract, and the cardiovascular system. In pancreatic beta cells, GLP-1R activation increases intracellular cAMP, which enhances glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) through PKA and Epac2 (exchange protein activated by cAMP) signaling. Crucially, this insulin secretion is glucose-dependent — it only occurs when blood glucose is elevated, which greatly reduces the risk of hypoglycemia compared to insulin or sulfonylureas. GLP-1R activation also suppresses glucagon secretion from alpha cells (reducing hepatic glucose output), promotes beta cell proliferation, and inhibits beta cell apoptosis.

The weight loss mechanism operates primarily through hypothalamic GLP-1R activation. GLP-1 receptors in the arcuate nucleus and paraventricular nucleus reduce appetite by activating POMC/CART (anorexigenic) neurons and inhibiting NPY/AgRP (orexigenic) neurons. This produces a sustained reduction in hunger and food intake. In the GI tract, GLP-1R activation delays gastric emptying, prolonging postprandial satiety and slowing the rate of nutrient absorption. The combined effects on appetite reduction and gastric emptying produce clinically meaningful weight loss — approximately 5-8% of body weight in clinical trials at the 3.0 mg daily dose (Saxenda). The LEADER cardiovascular outcomes trial demonstrated that liraglutide also reduces major adverse cardiovascular events, likely through anti-inflammatory, anti-atherogenic, and cardioprotective effects of GLP-1R activation in vascular endothelium and cardiomyocytes.

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.

Liraglutide

Common

nausea (40%+ initially, typically resolves within 2-4 weeks), vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, injection site reactions, headache.

Serious

pancreatitis, gallbladder disease including gallstones, acute kidney injury from dehydration, thyroid C-cell tumors (boxed warning based on rodent studies).

Rare

anaphylaxis, angioedema, medullary thyroid carcinoma (theoretical). Contraindicated in personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or MEN2.

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