Quick Comparison
| Danuglipron | Klotho | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | Approximately 6-9 hours, designed for twice-daily oral dosing | Recombinant alpha-Klotho: approximately 10-15 hours (estimated from primate studies) |
| Typical Dosage | Phase 2 trials: 40-200 mg oral twice daily, taken with food. Stepwise dose escalation over several weeks. Phase 3 development was halted in 2025; no approved dosing exists. | Currently no established human therapeutic dose. Phase 1 clinical trials of recombinant alpha-Klotho are exploring intravenous and subcutaneous dose-escalation protocols. Animal studies have used 10-50 mcg/kg subcutaneous several times per week. |
| Administration | Oral (tablet, twice daily, with food) — development discontinued | Recombinant alpha-Klotho: subcutaneous or intravenous injection (clinical trial settings only) |
| Research Papers | 5 papers | 5 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Danuglipron
Danuglipron (PF-06882961) is a non-peptide small molecule GLP-1 receptor agonist designed for oral administration without the food and water restrictions that limit Rybelsus (oral semaglutide). As a small molecule rather than a peptide, it is not destroyed by gastric acid or proteolytic enzymes, allowing flexible oral dosing.
The molecule binds the GLP-1 receptor outside the orthosteric peptide-binding pocket, producing biased agonism that activates the same downstream G-protein signalling as native GLP-1 — glucose-dependent insulin secretion, glucagon suppression, slowed gastric emptying, and central appetite regulation through hypothalamic and brainstem GLP-1 receptors. The key engineering feature is its short pharmacokinetic profile, with a half-life around 6-9 hours, designed for twice-daily dosing rather than once-daily exposure to limit peak plasma concentrations and improve gastrointestinal tolerability.
In Phase 2 obesity and type 2 diabetes trials, danuglipron produced meaningful weight loss and HbA1c reductions, validating the small-molecule oral GLP-1 concept. However, gastrointestinal tolerability was problematic — over 70% of trial participants experienced nausea — and the program was ultimately discontinued by Pfizer in 2025 following a single case of suspected drug-induced liver injury in a healthy volunteer. Pfizer pivoted to alternative oral GLP-1 candidates with reduced hepatic exposure profiles. Danuglipron remains a high-search-volume topic because of its prominent failure and because it set early benchmarks for what oral small-molecule GLP-1 drugs (notably orforglipron from Eli Lilly) needed to beat to succeed.
Klotho
Klotho is a single-pass transmembrane protein primarily expressed in the kidney, parathyroid gland, and choroid plexus, with a soluble form (s-Klotho) cleaved from the membrane and circulating systemically as an endocrine factor. It exists in three forms — alpha-Klotho (the most studied, anti-ageing form), beta-Klotho (which partners with FGF21), and gamma-Klotho — each with distinct receptor partnerships and tissue effects.
At the receptor level, alpha-Klotho is the obligate co-receptor for fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23), enabling FGF23 to bind and activate FGFR1 receptors in the kidney to regulate phosphate excretion. This makes Klotho a central node in mineral metabolism. Beyond this canonical role, soluble Klotho exerts numerous endocrine effects: it inhibits the IGF-1/insulin signalling pathway (a conserved longevity mechanism shared with caloric restriction), enhances expression of antioxidant enzymes via FoxO transcription factor activation, suppresses Wnt signalling (reducing stem cell exhaustion), inhibits TGF-beta signalling (preventing fibrosis), and blocks NF-kB and NLRP3 inflammasome activation (reducing inflammaging).
The ageing phenotype connection is striking: mice lacking Klotho develop multi-organ ageing — atherosclerosis, osteoporosis, skin atrophy, cognitive decline — within weeks of birth, while mice with elevated Klotho expression live up to 30% longer than controls. In humans, circulating Klotho levels decline with age, and lower levels associate with increased mortality and chronic disease risk in observational studies. Recombinant alpha-Klotho is in early clinical development as a potential therapy for chronic kidney disease, cognitive decline, and broader age-related diseases. The 2026 research wave around Klotho has positioned it as one of the most promising single-protein interventions in the longevity field, though no therapeutic Klotho product is yet approved for human use.
Risks & Safety
Danuglipron
Serious
a single case of potential drug-induced liver injury in a healthy volunteer led Pfizer to discontinue development in 2025 despite efficacy data.
Rare
standard GLP-1 class warnings (thyroid C-cell tumour signal, pancreatitis) plus the liver-injury signal that ended its development.
Klotho
Common
limited human safety data. Animal studies show generally good tolerability.
Serious
theoretical risk of altering phosphate and calcium homeostasis (Klotho is a critical regulator of FGF23 signalling); unknown effects on cancer biology in long-term use.
Rare
allergic reactions to recombinant protein. Quality and authenticity of any product sold as Klotho outside formal clinical trials should be considered highly uncertain.
Full Profiles
Danuglipron →
Pfizer's once-failed attempt at an oral GLP-1 weight loss pill (code name PF-06882961). Despite producing meaningful weight loss in Phase 2 trials, Pfizer discontinued development in 2025 after reports of potential liver injury in a healthy volunteer. Included here because it remains heavily searched as the cautionary tale of the oral GLP-1 race — and because Pfizer is now developing alternative oral GLP-1 candidates after the danuglipron setback.
Klotho →
A natural anti-ageing protein your body produces, named after the Greek goddess who spun the thread of life. Mice without it age extremely rapidly; mice with extra Klotho live up to 30% longer. Recent research shows it counters the majority of the 12 hallmarks of ageing — reducing cellular senescence, oxidative damage, fibrosis, and inflammation. Recombinant human Klotho is in early clinical trials. Currently more of a research target than a usable therapeutic.