Quick Comparison
| AT7687 | MOTS-C | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | Approximately 7-10 days, supporting once-weekly dosing | 4-8 hours |
| Typical Dosage | Phase 1 first-in-human trial: ascending single and multiple subcutaneous doses. Dose ranges and Phase 2 protocols still being established. The mechanism does not require dose escalation for tolerability the way GLP-1 drugs do — appetite is not the primary target. | Research: 5-10 mg subcutaneous three to five times weekly. No established clinical dosing protocol. Often cycled 4-8 weeks on, 2-4 weeks off. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection (likely once weekly based on pharmacokinetics) | Subcutaneous injection |
| Research Papers | 1 papers | 31 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
AT7687
AT7687 is a long-acting GIP receptor antagonist designed to reduce fat storage rather than suppress appetite — a fundamentally different mechanism from every other obesity drug currently on the market or in late-stage development. The rationale is grounded in human genetics: loss-of-function variants in the GIP receptor are associated with lower body mass index and reduced cardiometabolic risk, suggesting that pharmacologically blocking GIP signalling should reproduce these protective effects.
GIP (glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide) normally functions as a fat-storage signal — released from intestinal K-cells in response to food intake, it instructs adipose tissue to take up and store circulating fatty acids. By blocking the GIP receptor specifically on adipocytes, AT7687 prevents this fat-storage signal from being transmitted, leading to reduced lipid uptake into fat cells and a metabolic shift favouring fat oxidation in muscle and liver. Because the mechanism does not depend on suppressing hunger or slowing gastric emptying, the gastrointestinal side effects that limit GLP-1 drug tolerability are largely absent.
This mechanism is the conceptual mirror of MariTide (which combines GLP-1 agonism with GIP antagonism in a single molecule) — AT7687 isolates the GIP-antagonist component to test whether it can produce meaningful weight loss alone or in future combination with GLP-1 agonists. Antag Therapeutics' first-in-human Phase 1 results in 2026 showed acceptable tolerability with mild GI symptoms, plus reductions in LDL cholesterol and resting heart rate — early signals consistent with the predicted cardiometabolic benefit profile. Phase 2 trials are expected to define the magnitude of weight loss achievable in obese patients.
MOTS-C
MOTS-C (Mitochondrial Open Reading Frame of the Twelve S rRNA type-C) is a 16-amino-acid peptide encoded in the mitochondrial genome within the 12S rRNA gene. Its discovery in 2015 by Dr. Changhan David Lee at USC was groundbreaking because it demonstrated that the mitochondrial genome encodes functional peptides beyond the 13 oxidative phosphorylation subunits traditionally recognized — establishing mitochondria as endocrine organelles capable of producing signaling hormones.
MOTS-C's primary metabolic mechanism centers on activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), the cell's master energy sensor. MOTS-C activates AMPK by increasing the AMP/ATP ratio through inhibition of the folate cycle and de novo purine biosynthesis pathway. Specifically, MOTS-C inhibits the folate/methionine cycle enzyme ATIC (5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleotide formyltransferase), leading to accumulation of the intermediate AICAR — which is itself an endogenous AMPK activator. This creates a feed-forward AMPK activation signal.
Activated AMPK triggers a cascade of metabolic adaptations that mimic exercise: increased glucose uptake via GLUT4 translocation (independent of insulin signaling), enhanced fatty acid oxidation through ACC phosphorylation and CPT-1 activation, stimulation of mitochondrial biogenesis via PGC-1α, and suppression of mTORC1-mediated protein synthesis to conserve energy. Under metabolic stress, MOTS-C translocates from the cytoplasm to the nucleus — a remarkable feat for a mitochondria-encoded peptide — where it directly regulates nuclear gene expression by interacting with antioxidant response elements (AREs) and NF-κB target genes. This nuclear translocation represents a novel mechanism of mitonuclear communication — the mitochondria literally sending a peptide messenger to the nucleus to coordinate the cellular stress response. MOTS-C levels decline with age in humans, correlating with the age-related decline in metabolic fitness, insulin sensitivity, and exercise capacity, making it a compelling target for metabolic aging intervention.
Risks & Safety
AT7687
Common
mild gastrointestinal symptoms (notably milder than GLP-1 agonists in early data), injection site reactions.
Serious
long-term effects on bone health unknown — GIP signalling has roles in bone metabolism.
Rare
limited human safety data so far. Cardiovascular profile in Phase 1 included reductions in LDL cholesterol and resting heart rate, suggesting a metabolically favourable safety signal.
MOTS-C
Common
reactions at the injection site, mild fatigue.
Serious
limited human safety data, most evidence from lab and animal studies; no long-term data on chronically activating the energy-sensing pathway.
Rare
allergic reactions.
Full Profiles
AT7687 →
A novel obesity drug from Danish biotech Antag Therapeutics that takes a completely different approach — instead of suppressing appetite like all the GLP-1 drugs, it stops fat from being stored in the first place by blocking the GIP receptor in fat cells. First-in-human Phase 1 trial completed in 2026 showed it is well tolerated, with mild GI side effects, and produced reductions in LDL cholesterol and resting heart rate alongside weight loss signals.
MOTS-C →
A small peptide that comes from your mitochondria (the energy factories in your cells). It acts like an 'exercise mimetic' — it can produce many of the metabolic benefits of working out without actually exercising, such as improving how your body handles sugar and burns fat. Discovered in 2015, it was one of the first signaling molecules found to be encoded by mitochondrial DNA rather than the main DNA in your cell nucleus.