In vivo functional profiling and structural characterisation of the human Glp1r A316T variant

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Abstract

Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) are effective therapies for type 2 diabetes (T2D) and obesity, yet patient responses are variable. Variation in the human Glp1r gene might be directly linked to therapeutic responses. A naturally occurring missense variant, A316T, protects against T2D and cardiovascular disease. Here, we have generated and characterised a human Glp1r A316T mouse model. Human Glp1r A316T/A316T mice displayed lower fasting blood glucose versus wildtype littermates, even under metabolic stress, and exhibited alterations in islet cytoarchitecture and α/β-cell identity under a high-fat, high-sucrose diet. This was however associated with blunted responses to GLP-1RAs in vivo . Further investigations in rodent and human β-cell models demonstrated that human Glp1r A316T exhibits characteristics of constitutive activation but dampened GLP-1RA responses. Results are further supported by cryo-EM analyses and molecular dynamics simulations of GLP-1R A316T structure, collectively demonstrating that the A316T variant governs basal GLP-1R activity and pharmacological responses to GLP-1R-targeting therapies.

Teaser

The Glp1r A316T missense variant displays improved glucose tolerance but impaired pharmacological incretin responses in vivo .

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