Quick Comparison
| Pemvidutide | SLU-PP-332 | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | Approximately 168 hours (7 days), supporting once-weekly dosing | Estimated several hours (limited pharmacokinetic data) |
| Typical Dosage | Phase 2b/3 trials: 1.2-2.4 mg subcutaneous once weekly with stepwise dose escalation over 12 weeks. Both higher and lower dose arms being tested to balance weight loss against tolerability and the cardiovascular effects of glucagon receptor activation. | Preclinical only: mouse studies used 25-50 mg/kg oral. No established human dosing protocol. Very early stage compound with no human trials conducted. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection (once weekly) | Oral or injection (preclinical only) |
| Research Papers | 5 papers | 1 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Pemvidutide
Pemvidutide (ALT-801) is a once-weekly subcutaneous dual GLP-1 and glucagon receptor agonist, mechanistically similar to mazdutide and survodutide but with a distinct molecular design and a primary development focus on metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) alongside obesity. The dual mechanism combines appetite suppression with enhanced energy expenditure and direct hepatic fat mobilisation.
The GLP-1 receptor component drives the established central appetite suppression through hypothalamic and brainstem signalling, slows gastric emptying, and stimulates glucose-dependent insulin secretion. The glucagon receptor agonism component is what differentiates pemvidutide from pure GLP-1 drugs — glucagon binding in hepatocytes activates adenylyl cyclase and protein kinase A, driving up fatty acid beta-oxidation and ketogenesis while reducing de novo lipogenesis. This directly mobilises stored hepatic triglycerides for energy use rather than continued storage, addressing the core pathology of MASH. In adipose tissue and beyond, glucagon signalling also raises whole-body energy expenditure through thermogenic and futile-cycle mechanisms.
The receptor potency ratio is balanced so that glucagon-driven hepatic glucose output is offset by GLP-1-driven insulinotropic effects, yielding net glycemic improvement alongside enhanced fat oxidation. Phase 2b results in obesity demonstrated approximately 15.6% mean body weight loss at 48 weeks, and parallel MASH trials showed significant reductions in liver fat content alongside improvements in fibrosis markers. Phase 3 trials in both obesity and MASH are now underway, positioning pemvidutide as Altimmune's lead asset and a competitor to mazdutide and survodutide in the dual GLP-1/glucagon class.
SLU-PP-332
SLU-PP-332 is a small molecule agonist of estrogen-related receptor alpha (ERRα), one of three orphan nuclear receptors in the ERR family. Despite its name, ERRα does not bind estrogen — it was named for its structural similarity to estrogen receptors. ERRα is constitutively active and functions as a master transcription factor for genes controlling mitochondrial biogenesis, oxidative phosphorylation, and fatty acid oxidation, particularly in metabolically active tissues like skeletal muscle, heart, and brown adipose tissue.
SLU-PP-332 enhances ERRα transcriptional activity by stabilizing its active conformation and promoting coactivator recruitment (particularly PGC-1α, which is both an ERRα target gene and an ERRα coactivator, creating a positive feed-forward loop). Activated ERRα binds to ERR response elements (ERREs) in the promoter regions of hundreds of metabolic genes, upregulating the entire oxidative metabolism gene program: mitochondrial electron transport chain subunits, fatty acid oxidation enzymes, TCA cycle enzymes, and mitochondrial transcription and replication factors.
The most striking effect in preclinical studies is the transformation of skeletal muscle fiber type composition. SLU-PP-332 treatment increases the proportion of slow-twitch (type I) and oxidative fast-twitch (type IIA) fibers while decreasing glycolytic fast-twitch (type IIB/IIX) fibers. Type I fibers are rich in mitochondria, capillaries, and myoglobin — they are the fibers that endurance athletes develop through years of training. By pharmacologically shifting this fiber type ratio, SLU-PP-332 produces endurance capacity gains similar to what would require months of aerobic training. In mouse studies published in 2023, treated animals ran significantly longer and farther on treadmill tests. This ERRα-mediated mechanism is distinct from and potentially complementary to AMPK-based exercise mimetics like AICAR, as it targets a different node in the mitochondrial biogenesis regulatory network.
Risks & Safety
Pemvidutide
Common
nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, decreased appetite.
Serious
pancreatitis, gallstones, slightly elevated heart rate (a known signal for glucagon receptor agonists), changes in liver enzymes (typically improvements in MASH patients but worth monitoring).
Rare
thyroid C-cell tumour class warning, severe allergic reactions.
SLU-PP-332
Serious
no human safety data exists, potential off-target effects on estrogen-responsive tissues and metabolic pathways are entirely unstudied.
Full Profiles
Pemvidutide →
A weekly weight loss injection from Altimmune that targets two hormones (GLP-1 for appetite, glucagon for fat-burning) — similar to mazdutide and survodutide. Particularly being developed for fatty liver disease (MASH) alongside obesity. Phase 2b results showed around 15.6% body weight loss at 48 weeks, with significant reductions in liver fat. Also branded as ALT-801. Now in Phase 3 trials for both indications.
SLU-PP-332 →
A compound developed at Washington University that activates estrogen-related receptor alpha. A next-generation exercise mimetic that enhances endurance and promotes slow-twitch muscle fiber transformation through a different mechanism than AICAR. Activates the same gene programs that endurance training induces, including mitochondrial growth and fat-burning metabolism.