Quick Comparison

AT7687Retatrutide
Half-LifeApproximately 7-10 days, supporting once-weekly dosing144 hours (6 days)
Typical DosagePhase 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.Clinical trials: 1-12 mg subcutaneous once weekly, with dose escalation over initial weeks. Optimal dose: 12 mg subcutaneous once weekly based on Phase 2 data. Phase 3 dosing protocols pending.
AdministrationSubcutaneous injection (likely once weekly based on pharmacokinetics)Subcutaneous injection (weekly)
Research Papers1 papers30 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.

Retatrutide

Retatrutide is a triple hormone receptor agonist that simultaneously activates GIP, GLP-1, and glucagon receptors — the first molecule to target all three pathways. Each receptor system contributes distinct metabolic effects that combine to produce unprecedented weight loss results in clinical trials.

The GLP-1 component suppresses appetite through hypothalamic signaling and slows gastric emptying, while the GIP component enhances beta-cell insulin secretion and may improve lipid handling in adipose tissue. What sets retatrutide apart is the addition of glucagon receptor agonism. Glucagon receptors in the liver stimulate glycogenolysis, gluconeogenesis, and critically, hepatic fatty acid oxidation. In brown and beige adipose tissue, glucagon signaling drives thermogenesis — literally increasing the body's energy expenditure by converting calories to heat rather than storing them as fat.

The glucagon component also has significant implications for liver health, as it directly promotes the breakdown of hepatic triglycerides, making retatrutide particularly promising for metabolic-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD/NASH). The molecular design balances the three receptor affinities carefully — too much glucagon agonism could raise blood glucose, but the concurrent GLP-1 and GIP activation provides sufficient insulinotropic counterbalance to maintain glycemic control. Phase 2 trials demonstrated up to 24% body weight reduction at the highest dose, representing the largest weight loss achieved by any anti-obesity medication to date.

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.

Retatrutide

Common

nausea (25-45%), diarrhea, vomiting, constipation, reduced appetite.

Serious

slightly elevated heart rate, inflammation of the pancreas, gallstones.

Rare

thyroid tumour concern (seen with similar drugs in animals), severe allergic reactions.

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