Vagal Afferent Microbial Signal Modulation

Target: GLP1R, BDNF Composite Score: 0.521 Price: $0.50▼5.2% Citation Quality: Pending neurodegeneration Status: proposed
☰ Compare⚔ Duel⚛ Collideinteract with this hypothesis
🟡 ALS / Motor Neuron Disease 🔴 Alzheimer's Disease 🔥 Neuroinflammation 🟢 Parkinson's Disease 🧠 Neurodegeneration
✓ All Quality Gates Passed
Quality Report Card click to collapse
C+
Composite: 0.521
Top 33% of 513 hypotheses
T5 Contested
Contradicted by evidence, under dispute
B Mech. Plausibility 15% 0.60 Top 65%
B+ Evidence Strength 15% 0.70 Top 34%
A Novelty 12% 0.80 Top 37%
B+ Feasibility 12% 0.70 Top 33%
B+ Impact 12% 0.70 Top 49%
A Druggability 10% 0.80 Top 27%
B+ Safety Profile 8% 0.70 Top 25%
B Competition 6% 0.60 Top 69%
B+ Data Availability 5% 0.70 Top 38%
B Reproducibility 5% 0.60 Top 50%
Evidence
10 supporting | 9 opposing
Citation quality: 100%
Debates
1 session B
Avg quality: 0.68
Convergence
0.55 C+ 30 related hypothesis share this target

From Analysis:

What are the mechanisms by which gut microbiome dysbiosis influences Parkinson's disease pathogenesis through the gut-brain axis?

What are the mechanisms by which gut microbiome dysbiosis influences Parkinson's disease pathogenesis through the gut-brain axis?

→ View full analysis & debate transcript

Hypotheses from Same Analysis (8)

These hypotheses emerged from the same multi-agent debate that produced this hypothesis.

Selective TLR4 Modulation to Prevent Gut-Derived Neuroinflammatory Priming
Score: 0.617 | Target: TLR4
Gut Microbiome Remodeling to Prevent Systemic NLRP3 Priming in Neurodegeneration
Score: 0.607 | Target: NLRP3, CASP1, IL1B, PYCARD
Microglial AIM2 Inflammasome as the Primary Driver of TDP-43 Proteinopathy Neuroinflammation in ALS/FTD
Score: 0.601 | Target: AIM2, CASP1, IL1B, PYCARD, TARDBP
Astrocyte-Intrinsic NLRP3 Inflammasome Activation by Alpha-Synuclein Aggregates Drives Non-Cell-Autonomous Neurodegeneration
Score: 0.599 | Target: NLRP3, CASP1, IL1B, PYCARD
Microbial Inflammasome Priming Prevention
Score: 0.584 | Target: NLRP3, CASP1, IL1B, PYCARD
Mitochondrial DAMPs-Driven AIM2 Inflammasome Activation in Neurodegeneration
Score: 0.582 | Target: AIM2, CASP1, IL1B, PYCARD
Calcium-Dysregulated mPTP Opening as an Alternative mtDNA Release Mechanism for AIM2 Inflammasome Activation in Neurodegeneration
Score: 0.581 | Target: AIM2, CASP1, IL1B, PYCARD, PPIF
Mitochondrial DNA-Driven AIM2 Inflammasome Activation in Neurodegeneration
Score: 0.580 | Target: AIM2, CASP1, IL1B, PYCARD

→ View full analysis & all 9 hypotheses

Description

Molecular Mechanism and Rationale

The vagus nerve represents a critical bidirectional communication highway between the gut microbiome and the central nervous system, with vagal afferent neurons serving as primary transducers of microbial metabolites and inflammatory signals. This hypothesis proposes that targeted modulation of vagal afferent signaling through manipulation of GLP1R (glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor) and BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor) pathways can provide disease-modifying therapy for neurodegenerative conditions.

...

Figures & Visualizations

debate_overview for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149
debate_overview for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149 debate overview
debate_overview for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149
debate_overview for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149 debate overview
pathway_diagram for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149
pathway_diagram for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149 pathway diagram
pathway_diagram for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149
pathway_diagram for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149 pathway diagram
pathway_diagram for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149
pathway_diagram for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149 pathway diagram
pathway_diagram for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149
pathway_diagram for SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149 pathway diagram

Dimension Scores

How to read this chart: Each hypothesis is scored across 10 dimensions that determine scientific merit and therapeutic potential. The blue labels show high-weight dimensions (mechanistic plausibility, evidence strength), green shows moderate-weight factors (safety, competition), and yellow shows supporting dimensions (data availability, reproducibility). Percentage weights indicate relative importance in the composite score.
Mechanistic 0.60 (15%) Evidence 0.70 (15%) Novelty 0.80 (12%) Feasibility 0.70 (12%) Impact 0.70 (12%) Druggability 0.80 (10%) Safety 0.70 (8%) Competition 0.60 (6%) Data Avail. 0.70 (5%) Reproducible 0.60 (5%) 0.521 composite
19 citations 19 with PMID 2 high-strength 13 medium Validation: 100% 10 supporting / 9 opposing
Evidence Matrix — sortable by strength/year, click Abstract to expand
ClaimTypeSourceStrength ↕Year ↕PMIDsAbstract
Therapeutic potentials of plant iridoids in Alzhei…SupportingEur J Med Chem HIGH2019PMID:30877973
The microbiome and eating disorders: a new framewo…SupportingNeuroscience HIGH2026PMID:41921818
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists …SupportingPharmacol Res MEDIUM2022PMID:36372278
Brainstem BDNF neurons are downstream of GFRAL/GLP…SupportingNat Commun MEDIUM2024PMID:39737892
In Silico Pharmacogenomic Assessment of Glucagon-l…SupportingCurr Neuropharm… MEDIUM2025PMID:39865816
The Involvement of PGRMC1 Signaling in Cognitive I…SupportingNeuropsychobiol… MEDIUM2023PMID:37673050
The protective effect of Geniposide on diabetic co…SupportingPsychopharmacol… MEDIUM2020PMID:31811349
The potential role of Tirzepatide as adjuvant ther…SupportingInt Immunopharm… MEDIUM2024PMID:38788447
Vagal afferent signaling via GLP1R activation enha…SupportingSteinberg et al… STRONG-PMID:29959379
Short-chain fatty acid butyrate produced by commen…SupportingErny et al., Na… STRONG-PMID:26354860
The neuroprotective effects of glucagon-like pepti…OpposingFront Neurosci MEDIUM2022PMID:36117625
Therapeutic potentials of plant iridoids in Alzhei…OpposingEur J Med Chem MEDIUM2019PMID:30877973
The effects of Fc fusion protein glucagon-like pep…OpposingBiomed Pharmaco… MEDIUM2024PMID:38518602
Vagal afferent signaling blockade through vagotomy…OpposingAthauda et al.,… MODERATE-PMID:23396473-
BDNF signaling enhancement through direct central …OpposingNagahara et al.… MODERATE-PMID:16079410
Liraglutide Attenuates Atorvastatin-Induced Hepato…OpposingToxics MEDIUM2025PMID:40711038
Management of Diabetes Mellitus in Normal Renal Fu…OpposingInt J Mol Sci MEDIUM2019PMID:31261624
Geniposide Ameliorated Dexamethasone-Induced Chole…OpposingCells MEDIUM2021PMID:34943934
Comparative effects of glucagon-like peptide-1 rec…OpposingCardiovasc Diab… MEDIUM2024PMID:39217337
Legacy Card View — expandable citation cards

Supporting Evidence 10

Therapeutic potentials of plant iridoids in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases: A review. HIGH
Eur J Med Chem · 2019 · PMID:30877973
ABSTRACT

Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Parkinson's disease (PD) are the most common age-related neurodegenerative disorders, affecting several millions of aged people globally. Among these disorders, AD is more severe, affecting about 7% of individuals aged 65 and above. AD is primarily a dementia-related disorder from progressive cognitive deterioration and memory impairment, while PD is primarily a movement disorder illness having three major kinesia or movement disorder symptoms, bradykinesia (slowness of movements), hypokinesia (reduction of movement amplitude), and akinesia (absence of normal unconscious movements) along with muscle rigidity and tremor at rest. AD is characterized by deposition of extracellular beta-amyloid (Aβ) proteins and intracellular neurofibrillary tangles (NFT), composed of hyperphosphorylated tau proteins in the neurons located particularly in hippocampus and cerebral cortex regions of brain, resulting the neuronal loss, while PD is characterized by deposition of intraneuronal aggregates of mostly composed of alpha-synuclein gene as Lewy bodies (LB) in the striatal region, known as substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) of brain, leading to the death of dopaminergic neurons. These are known as pathological hallmarks of these diseases. However, in some overlapping cases, known as Alzheimer with Parkinson disease or vice versa, alpha-synuclein deposition in AD and tau deposition in PD patients are found. Oxidative stress-induced glial cells activation, neuroi

The microbiome and eating disorders: a new framework at the interface of interoception and reward. HIGH
Neuroscience · 2026 · PMID:41921818
ABSTRACT

Accumulating evidence suggests that the gut microbiome can modulate brain and behaviour including those relevant to eating behaviours and reward signalling through the dynamic communication pathways of the microbiota-gut-brain-axis. Emerging evidence links altered gut microbial composition to disordered eating patterns, implicating the gut microbiome as a possible mechanism underlying eating disorders, as well as a potential therapeutic target for these conditions. In this review, we synthesise evidence across preclinical and clinical research to propose an integrated framework wherein the gut microbiome, interoception and reward circuits may interact to shape disordered eating behaviours. We firstly explore how microbial signals modulate homeostatic and reward feeding systems via vagal afferents, neurotransmitter modulation and immune-neural pathways, and how these signals converge in brain regions implicated in reward systems and interoception. Particular attention is given to how these interactions may occur in under- and over-eating phenotypes of disordered eating. The therapeutic potential of microbiota-targeted interventions to modulate eating disorder-induced dysregulations in interoception and reward signalling is discussed. Combined evidence suggests a paradigm shift in the etiological considerations of eating disorders is warranted taking into account dysregulations of gut microbiota and its effects on reward processing and interoceptive signalling. Specifically, we

Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists and neuroinflammation: Implications for neurodegenerative di… MEDIUM
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists and neuroinflammation: Implications for neurodegenerative disease treatment
Pharmacol Res · 2022 · PMID:36372278
ABSTRACT

Chronic, excessive neuroinflammation is a key feature of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Parkinson's disease (PD). However, neuroinflammatory pathways have yet to be effectively targeted in clinical treatments for such diseases. Interestingly, increased inflammation and neurodegenerative disease risk have been associated with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and insulin resistance (IR), suggesting that treatments that mitigate T2DM pathology may be successful in treating neuroinflammatory and neurodegenerative pathology as well. Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) is an incretin hormone that promotes healthy insulin signaling, regulates blood sugar levels, and suppresses appetite. Consequently, numerous GLP-1 receptor (GLP-1R) stimulating drugs have been developed and approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and related global regulatory authorities for the treatment of T2DM. Furthermore, GLP-1R stimulating drugs have been associated with anti-inflammatory, neurotrophic, and neuroprotective properties in neurodegenerative disorder preclinical models, and hence hold promise for repurposing as a treatment for neurodegenerative diseases. In this review, we discuss incretin signaling, neuroinflammatory pathways, and the intersections between neuroinflammation, brain IR, and neurodegenerative diseases, with a focus on AD and PD. We additionally overview current FDA-approved incretin receptor stimulating drugs and agents in development, inclu

Brainstem BDNF neurons are downstream of GFRAL/GLP1R signalling. MEDIUM
Nat Commun · 2024 · PMID:39737892
ABSTRACT

Growth differentiation factor 15, GDF15, and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) analogues act through brainstem neurons that co-localise their receptors, GDNF-family receptor α-like (GFRAL) and GLP1R, to reduce food intake and body weight. However, their use as clinical treatments is partially hampered since both can also induce sickness-like behaviours, including aversion, that are mediated through a well-characterised pathway via the exterolateral parabrachial nucleus. Here, in mice, we describe a separate pathway downstream of GFRAL/GLP1R neurons that involves a distinct population of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) cells in the medial nucleus of the tractus solitarius. Thus, BDNFmNTS neurons are required for the weight-reducing actions of both GDF15 and the GLP1RA, Exendin-4. Moreover, acute activation of BDNFmNTS neurons is sufficient to reduce food intake and drive fatty acid oxidation and might provide a route for longer-term weight loss.

In Silico Pharmacogenomic Assessment of Glucagon-like Peptide-1 (GLP1) Agonists and the Genetic Addiction Risk… MEDIUM
In Silico Pharmacogenomic Assessment of Glucagon-like Peptide-1 (GLP1) Agonists and the Genetic Addiction Risk Score (GARS) Related Pathways: Implications for Suicidal Ideation and Substance Use Disorder.
Curr Neuropharmacol · 2025 · PMID:39865816
ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor (GLP1R) agonists have become widespread anti-obesity/diabetes pharmaceuticals in the United States. AIM: This article aimed to provide our current knowledge on the plausible mechanisms linked to the role of Ozempic (Semaglutide), which is generalized as one of the anti-addiction compounds. METHODS: The effects of GLP1R agonists in Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) and substance use disorder (SUD) are mediated, in part, through the downregulation of dopamine signaling. We posit that while GLP1R agonism could offer therapeutic advantages in hyperdopaminergia, it may be detrimental in patients with hypodopaminergia, potentially leading to long-term induction of Suicidal Ideation (SI). The alleged posit of GLP1 agonists to induce dopamine homeostasis is incorrect. This study refined 31 genes based on the targets of Ozempic, GLP1R, and related enzymes for SI and 10 genes of the Genetic Addiction Risk Score (GARS) test. STRING-MODEL refined 29 genes, and further primary analyses indicated associations of GLP1R with DRD3, BDNF, CREB1, CRH, IL6, and DPP4. RESULTS: In-depth silico enrichment analysis revealed an association between candidate genes and depressive phenotypes linked with dopaminergic signaling. Finally, through primary and in-depth silico analyses, we demonstrated multiple findings supporting that GLP1R agonists can induce depression phenotypes. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that associated polymorphisms seem to have overlapping

The Involvement of PGRMC1 Signaling in Cognitive Impairment Induced by Long-Term Clozapine Treatment in Rats. MEDIUM
Neuropsychobiology · 2023 · PMID:37673050
ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Progesterone receptor component 1 (PGRMC1) has been identified as a potential target in atypical antipsychotic drug-induced metabolic disturbances as well as neuroprotection in the central nervous system. In our study, we aimed to figure out the essential role of PGRMC1 signaling pathway underlying clozapine-induced cognitive impairment. METHODS: In male SD rats, we utilized recombinant adeno-associated viruses (BBB 2.0) and the specific inhibitor of PGRMC1 (AG205) to regulate the expression of PGRMC1 in the brain, with a special focus on the hippocampus. Treatments of clozapine and AG205 were conducted for 28 days, and subsequent behavioral tests including modified elevated plus maze and Morris water maze were conducted to evaluate the cognitive performance. Hippocampal protein expressions were measured by Western blotting. RESULTS: Our study showed that long-term clozapine administration led to cognitive impairment as confirmed by behavioral tests as well as histopathological examination in the hippocampus. Clozapine inhibited neural survival through the PGRMC1/EGFR/GLP1R-PI3K-Akt signaling pathway, leading to a decrease in the downstream survival factor, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), and simultaneously promoted neural apoptosis in the rat hippocampus. Intriguingly, by targeting at the hippocampal PGRMC1, we found that inhibiting PGRMC1 mimics, while its upregulation notably mitigates clozapine-induced cognitive impairment through PGRMC1 and its do

The protective effect of Geniposide on diabetic cognitive impairment through BTK/TLR4/NF-κB pathway. MEDIUM
Psychopharmacology (Berl) · 2020 · PMID:31811349
ABSTRACT

The purpose of the present study was to elucidate the pharmacological effects of Geniposide (GEN) on high diet fed and streptozotocin (STZ)-caused diabetic cognitive impairment. The mice were fed with high fat diet (HFD) for 4 weeks and intraperitoneally injected with 60 mg/kg STZ for three times within 72 h. The mice with glucose level over 15 mmol/l were regarded as diabetic and selected for further studies. The animals were intragastrically treated with metformin or GEN once daily for 4 weeks. Afterwards, the animals were applied for Y maze, novel object recognition (NOR) test, step-through passive avoidance test, and Morris water maze (MWM) test. The blood glucose and body weight were examined. The SH-SY5Y cells were treated with GEN in the presence or absence of ibrutinib and stimulated with high-glucose culture medium. The tumor necrosis factor-a (TNF-α) and interleukin (IL)-6 in serum, hippocampus, and supernatant were measured using ELISA method. The protein expressions of Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK), Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), myeloid differentiating factor 88 (MyD88), nuclear factor kappa-B (NF-κB), p-NF-κB, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), cAMP-response element binding protein (CREB), p-CREB, and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) were detected by western blot analyses. As a result, the GEN treatment notably attenuated the body weight, blood glucose, and cognitive decline. GEN also inhibited the generations of inflammatory cytokines. Furthermor

The potential role of Tirzepatide as adjuvant therapy in countering colistin-induced nephro and neurotoxicity … MEDIUM
The potential role of Tirzepatide as adjuvant therapy in countering colistin-induced nephro and neurotoxicity in rats via modulation of PI3K/p-Akt/GSK3-β/NF-kB p65 hub, shielding against oxidative and endoplasmic reticulum stress, and activation of p-CREB/BDNF/TrkB cascade.
Int Immunopharmacol · 2024 · PMID:38788447
ABSTRACT

Although colistin has a crucial antibacterial activity in treating multidrug-resistant gram-negative bacteria strains; it exhibited renal and neuronal toxicities rendering its use a challenge. Previous studies investigated the incretin hormones either glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) or glucagonlike peptide-1 (GLP-1) for their neuroprotective and nephroprotective effectiveness. The present study focused on investigating Tirzepatide (Tirze), a dual GLP-1/GIP agonist, as an adjuvant therapy in the colistin treatment protocol for attenuating its renal and neuronal complications. Rats were divided into; The normal control group, the colistin-treated group received colistin (300,000 IU/kg/day for 7 days; i.p.). The Tirze-treated group received Tirze (1.35 mg/kg on the 1,4,7thdays; s.c.) and daily colistin. Tirze effectively enhanced histopathological alterations, renal function parameters, and locomotor activity in rats. Tirze mechanistically acted via modulating various signaling axes evolved under the insult of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinases (PI3K)/phosphorylated protein kinase-B (p-Akt)/ glycogen synthase kinase (GSK)3-β hub causing mitigation of nuclear factor (NF)-κB (NF-κB) / tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), increment of nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2)/ glutathione (GSH), downregulation of ER stress-related biomarkers (activation transcription factor 4 (ATF4) and C/EBP homologous protein (CHOP)), antiapoptotic effects coupling with reduct

Vagal afferent signaling via GLP1R activation enhances BDNF expression in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagu… STRONG
Vagal afferent signaling via GLP1R activation enhances BDNF expression in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus, which directly innervates enteric neurons and modulates microbial-derived short-chain fatty acid sensing through enhanced neurotrophin-dependent synaptic plasticity in the brainstem.
Steinberg et al., Nature Neuroscience (2018) · PMID:29959379
ABSTRACT

Chronic NP-1 administration reduces body weight and hepatic steatosis despite induction of tolerance in adiponectin gene transcription with respect to the acute actions of this drug. This study explored the hypothesis that NP-1 could exert these effects through mechanisms independent of adiponectin. To this aim, we took advantage of the Zucker (fa/fa) rat model, which exhibits obesity, fatty liver and elevated leptin and adiponectin levels. Body weight and food intake were reduced after chronic NP-1 treatment. Plasma TNFα concentrations were elevated but no increase in adiponectin was found. Even so, NP-1 ameliorated fatty liver and corrected dyslipidemia by mechanisms probably associated with reduced feeding, transcription of Cpt1 and down-regulation of Hmgcr-CoA expression. In brown fat tissue NP-1 increased Dnmt1 (inhibitor of Adipoq) while it reduced Ucp1 expression and heat production, which excludes thermogenesis as a mechanism of the NP-1 slimming effect. The anti-obesity action of chronic NP-1 administration might be mediated by TNFα, which is known to have anorectic actions in the hypothalamus and to regulate both Dmnt1 and Ucp1 expression in adipose tissues. This finding opens up the possibility of using NP-1-mediated TNFα-induced weight loss as an innovative treatment of complicated obesity under strict pharmacologic control.

Short-chain fatty acid butyrate produced by commensal microbiota potentiates vagal afferent neuron excitabilit… STRONG
Short-chain fatty acid butyrate produced by commensal microbiota potentiates vagal afferent neuron excitability through histone deacetylase inhibition, leading to increased GLP1 secretion from intestinal L-cells and subsequent BDNF-dependent neuroprotection in substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons vulnerable to neurodegeneration.
Erny et al., Nature Immunology (2015) · PMID:26354860
ABSTRACT

The pneumococcal enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) reference standard serum, lot 89SF, has been in use since 1990 and was replaced in 2013 with a new reference standard, 007sp, that is projected to be available for the next 25 years. 007sp was generated under an FDA-approved clinical protocol; 278 adult volunteers were immunized with the 23-valent unconjugated polysaccharide vaccine Pneumovax II, and a unit of blood was obtained twice from each immunized subject within 120 days following immunization. Pooled serum was prepared from the plasma of 262 subjects, filled at 6 ml per vial, and lyophilized. Five independent laboratories participated in bridging the serotype-specific IgG assignments for 89SF to the new reference standard, 007sp, to establish equivalent reference values for 13 pneumococcal capsular serotypes (1,3, 4, 5, 6A, 6B, 7F, 9V, 14, 18C, 19A, 19F, and 23F) by using the WHO reference ELISA. In a second study involving three laboratories, a similar protocol was used to assign weight-based IgG concentrations in micrograms per ml to 007sp of seven serotypes (8, 10A, 11A, 12F, 15B, 22F, and 33F) also present in the 23-valent pneumococcal unconjugated polysaccharide vaccine. In addition, the IgG assignments for a 12-member WHO quality control (QC) serum panel were also extended to cover these seven serotypes. Agreement was excellent, with a concordance correlation coefficient (r(c)) of >0.996 when each laboratory was compared to the assigned values for the 12

Opposing Evidence 9

The neuroprotective effects of glucagon-like peptide 1 in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease: An in-depth rev… MEDIUM
The neuroprotective effects of glucagon-like peptide 1 in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease: An in-depth review.
Front Neurosci · 2022 · PMID:36117625
ABSTRACT

Currently, there is no disease-modifying treatment available for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease (AD and PD) and that includes the highly controversial approval of the Aβ-targeting antibody aducanumab for the treatment of AD. Hence, there is still an unmet need for a neuroprotective drug treatment in both AD and PD. Type 2 diabetes is a risk factor for both AD and PD. Glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) is a peptide hormone and growth factor that has shown neuroprotective effects in preclinical studies, and the success of GLP-1 mimetics in phase II clinical trials in AD and PD has raised new hope. GLP-1 mimetics are currently on the market as treatments for type 2 diabetes. GLP-1 analogs are safe, well tolerated, resistant to desensitization and well characterized in the clinic. Herein, we review the existing evidence and illustrate the neuroprotective pathways that are induced following GLP-1R activation in neurons, microglia and astrocytes. The latter include synaptic protection, improvements in cognition, learning and motor function, amyloid pathology-ameliorating properties (Aβ, Tau, and α-synuclein), the suppression of Ca2+ deregulation and ER stress, potent anti-inflammatory effects, the blockage of oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis pathways, enhancements in the neuronal insulin sensitivity and energy metabolism, functional improvements in autophagy and mitophagy, elevated BDNF and glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) synthesis as w

Therapeutic potentials of plant iridoids in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases: A review. MEDIUM
Eur J Med Chem · 2019 · PMID:30877973
ABSTRACT

Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Parkinson's disease (PD) are the most common age-related neurodegenerative disorders, affecting several millions of aged people globally. Among these disorders, AD is more severe, affecting about 7% of individuals aged 65 and above. AD is primarily a dementia-related disorder from progressive cognitive deterioration and memory impairment, while PD is primarily a movement disorder illness having three major kinesia or movement disorder symptoms, bradykinesia (slowness of movements), hypokinesia (reduction of movement amplitude), and akinesia (absence of normal unconscious movements) along with muscle rigidity and tremor at rest. AD is characterized by deposition of extracellular beta-amyloid (Aβ) proteins and intracellular neurofibrillary tangles (NFT), composed of hyperphosphorylated tau proteins in the neurons located particularly in hippocampus and cerebral cortex regions of brain, resulting the neuronal loss, while PD is characterized by deposition of intraneuronal aggregates of mostly composed of alpha-synuclein gene as Lewy bodies (LB) in the striatal region, known as substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) of brain, leading to the death of dopaminergic neurons. These are known as pathological hallmarks of these diseases. However, in some overlapping cases, known as Alzheimer with Parkinson disease or vice versa, alpha-synuclein deposition in AD and tau deposition in PD patients are found. Oxidative stress-induced glial cells activation, neuroi

The effects of Fc fusion protein glucagon-like peptide-1 and glucagon dual receptor agonist with different rec… MEDIUM
The effects of Fc fusion protein glucagon-like peptide-1 and glucagon dual receptor agonist with different receptor selectivity in vivo studies
Biomed Pharmacother · 2024 · PMID:38518602
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1)/glucagon (GCG) dual receptor agonists with different receptor selectivity are under investigation and have shown significant improvement in both weight loss and glycemic control, but the optimal potency ratio between the two receptors to balance efficacy and safety remains unclear. EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH: We designed and constructed several dual receptor agonists with different receptor potency ratios using Fc fusion protein technology. The long-term effects of the candidates on body weight and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) were evaluated in diet-induced obese (DIO) model mice, high-fat diet (HFD)-ob/ob mice and AMLN diet-induced MASLD mice. Repeat dose toxicity assays were performed to investigate the safety profile of the candidate (HEC-C070) in Sprague Dawley (SD) rats. KEY RESULTS: The high GCG receptor (GCGR) selectivity of HEC-C046 makes it more prominent than other compounds for weight loss and most MASLD parameters but may lead to safety concerns. The weight change of HEC-C052 with the lowest GCG agonism was inferior to that of selective GLP-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA) semaglutide in DIO model mice. The GLP-1R selectivity of HEC-C070 with moderate GCG agonism has a significant effect on weight loss and liver function in obese mice, and its lowest observed adverse effect level (LOAEL) was 30 nmol/kg in the repeat dose toxicity study. CONCLUSION: We compared the potential of the Fc fusion pro

Vagal afferent signaling blockade through vagotomy or selective afferent denervation does not impair GLP-1R-me… MODERATE
Vagal afferent signaling blockade through vagotomy or selective afferent denervation does not impair GLP-1R-mediated neuroprotection in experimental Parkinson's disease models, suggesting GLP-1R effects are independent of vagal sensory input mechanisms.
Athauda et al., Neurobiology of Disease (2013) · PMID:23396473
BDNF signaling enhancement through direct central administration shows superior neuroprotective outcomes compa… MODERATE
BDNF signaling enhancement through direct central administration shows superior neuroprotective outcomes compared to peripheral GLP-1R agonism in neurodegeneration models, indicating that circumventing vagal afferent transduction may be therapeutically advantageous.
Nagahara et al., The Journal of Neuroscience (2009) · PMID:16079410
ABSTRACT

Accumulation of amyloid-beta (Abeta) into senile plaques in Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a hallmark neuropathological feature of the disorder, which likely contributes to alterations in neuronal structure and function. Recent work has revealed changes in neurite architecture associated with plaques and functional changes in cortical signaling in amyloid precursor protein (APP) expressing mouse models of AD. Here we developed a method using gene transfer techniques to introduce green fluorescent protein (GFP) into neurons, allowing the investigation of neuronal processes in the vicinity of plaques. Multiphoton imaging of GFP-labeled neurons in living Tg2576 APP mice revealed disrupted neurite trajectories and reductions in dendritic spine density compared with age-matched control mice. A profound deficit in spine density (approximately 50%) extends approximately 20 mum from plaque edges. Importantly, a robust decrement (approximately 25%) also occurs on dendrites not associated with plaques, suggesting widespread loss of postsynaptic apparatus. Plaques and dendrites remained stable over the course of weeks of imaging. Postmortem analysis of axonal immunostaining and colocalization of synaptophysin and postsynaptic density 95 protein staining around plaques indicate a parallel loss of presynaptic and postsynaptic partners. These results show considerable changes in dendrites and dendritic spines in APP transgenic mice, demonstrating a dramatic synaptotoxic effect of dense-cored

Liraglutide Attenuates Atorvastatin-Induced Hepatotoxicity by Restoring GLP-1R Expression and Activating Nrf2 … MEDIUM
Liraglutide Attenuates Atorvastatin-Induced Hepatotoxicity by Restoring GLP-1R Expression and Activating Nrf2 and Autophagy Pathways in Wistar Rats
Toxics · 2025 · PMID:40711038
ABSTRACT

HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors, statins, are extensively used to treat hyperlipidemia, coronary artery disease, and other atherosclerotic disorders. However, one of the common side effects of statin therapy is a mild elevation in liver aminotransferases, observed in less than 3% of patients. Atorvastatin and simvastatin, in particular, are most frequently associated with statin-induced liver injury, leading to treatment discontinuation. Recent research has highlighted the antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) activation in protecting against liver injury. Nonetheless, the potential protective effects of liraglutide (LIRA), a GLP-1R agonist, against atorvastatin (ATO)-induced liver dysfunction have not been fully elucidated. In this context, the present study aimed to investigate the protective role of LIRA in mitigating ATO-induced liver injury in rats, offering new insights into managing statin-associated hepatotoxicity. Indeed, LIRA treatment improved liver function enzymes and attenuated histopathological alterations. LIRA treatment enhanced antioxidant defenses by increasing Nrf2 content and superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity, while reducing NADPH oxidase. Additionally, LIRA suppressed inflammation by downregulating the HMGB1/TLR-4/RAGE axis and inhibiting the protein expression of pY323-MAPK p38 and pS635-NFκB p65 content resulting in decreased proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-α and IL-1β). Furthermore, LIRA upregulated GL

Management of Diabetes Mellitus in Normal Renal Function, Renal Dysfunction and Renal Transplant Recipients, F… MEDIUM
Management of Diabetes Mellitus in Normal Renal Function, Renal Dysfunction and Renal Transplant Recipients, Focusing on Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Agonist: A Review Based upon Current Evidence
Int J Mol Sci · 2019 · PMID:31261624
ABSTRACT

Diabetes Mellitus (DM) is a leading cause of both Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) and End-stage Renal Disease (ESRD). After 2008, there has been much evidence presented, and recently the guidelines for sugar control have changed to focus on being more disease orientated. GLP-1 Receptor Agonists (GLP-1R) and sodium glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors are suggested as the first line towards fighting all DM, CVD and ESRD. However, the benefits of GLP-1R in organ transplantation recipients remain very limited. No clinical trials have been designed for this particular population. GLP-1R, a gastrointestinal hormone of the incretin family, possesses antidiabetic, antihypertensive, anti-inflammatory, anti-apoptotic and immunomodulatory actions. There are few drug-drug interactions, with delayed gastric emptying being the major concern. The trough level of tacrolimus may not be significant but should still be closely monitored. There are some reasons which support GLP-1R in recipients seeking glycemic control. Post-transplant DM is due to an impaired β-cell function and glucose-induced glucagon suppression during hyperglycemia, which can be reversed by GLP-1R. GLP-1R infusion tends to relieve immunosuppressant related toxicity. Until now, in some cases, glycemic control and body weight reduction can be anticipated with GLP-1R. Additional renal benefits have also been reported. Side effects of hypoglycemia and gastrointestinal discomfort were rarely reported. In conclusion, GLP-1R could be

Geniposide Ameliorated Dexamethasone-Induced Cholesterol Accumulation in Osteoblasts by Mediating the GLP-1R/A… MEDIUM
Geniposide Ameliorated Dexamethasone-Induced Cholesterol Accumulation in Osteoblasts by Mediating the GLP-1R/ABCA1 Axis
Cells · 2021 · PMID:34943934
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Overexposure to glucocorticoid (GC) produces various clinical complications, including osteoporosis (OP), dyslipidemia, and hypercholesterolemia. Geniposide (GEN) is a natural iridoid compound isolated from Eucommia ulmoides. Our previous study found that GEN could alleviate dexamethasone (DEX)-induced differentiation inhibition of MC3T3-E1 cells. However, whether GEN protected against Dex-induced cholesterol accumulation in osteoblasts was still unclear. METHODS: DEX was used to induce rat OP. Micro-CT data was obtained. The ALP activity and mineralization were determined by the staining assays, and the total intracellular cholesterol was determined by the ELISA kits. The protein expression was detected by western blot. RESULTS: GEN ameliorated Dex-induced micro-structure damages and cell differentiation inhibition in the bone trabecula in rats. In MC3T3-E1 cells, Dex enhanced the total intracellular cholesterol, which reduced the activity of cell proliferation and differentiation. Effectively, GEN decreased DEX-induced cholesterol accumulation, enhanced cell differentiation, and upregulated the expression of the GLP-1R/ABCA1 axis. In addition, inhibition of ABAC1 expression reversed the actions of GEN. Treatment with Exendin9-39, a GLP-1R inhibitor, could abrogate the protective activity of GEN. CONCLUSIONS: GEN ameliorated Dex-induced accumulation of cholesterol and inhibition of cell differentiation by mediating the GLP-1R/ABCA1 axis in MC3T3-E1 cells.

Comparative effects of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and sodium-glucose co-transporter-2 inhibitor… MEDIUM
Comparative effects of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and sodium-glucose co-transporter-2 inhibitors on heart failure with preserved ejection fraction in diabetic patients: a meta-analysis
Cardiovasc Diabetol · 2024 · PMID:39217337
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is common in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D), leading to high morbidity and mortality. Managing HFpEF in diabetic patients is challenging with limited treatments. Sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP1-RA) have shown potential cardiovascular benefits. This meta-analysis compares the effects of GLP1-RA and SGLT2 inhibitors on HFpEF in T2D patients. METHODS: We conducted a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies evaluating GLP1-RA and SGLT2 inhibitors' impact on HFpEF in T2D patients. Databases searched included PubMed, MEDLINE, and Cochrane Library up to July 2024. Primary outcomes were changes in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), myocardial fibrosis (extracellular volume fraction, ECV), and functional capacity (6-minute walk test, 6MWT). Secondary outcomes included HbA1c, body weight, and systolic blood pressure (SBP).  RESULTS: Twelve studies with 3,428 patients (GLP1-RA: 1,654; SGLT2 inhibitors: 1,774) were included. Both GLP1-RA and SGLT2 inhibitors significantly improved LVEF compared to placebo (GLP1-RA: mean difference [MD] 2.8%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.5 to 4.1, p < 0.001; SGLT2 inhibitors: MD 3.2%, 95% CI 2.0 to 4.4, p < 0.001). SGLT2 inhibitors significantly reduced myocardial fibrosis (MD -3.5%, 95% CI -4.2 to -2.8, p < 0.001) more than GLP1-RA (MD -2.3%, 95% CI -3.0 to -1.6, p < 0.00

Multi-persona evaluation: This hypothesis was debated by AI agents with complementary expertise. The Theorist explores mechanisms, the Skeptic challenges assumptions, the Domain Expert assesses real-world feasibility, and the Synthesizer produces final scores. Expand each card to see their arguments.
Gap Analysis | 4 rounds | 2026-04-01 | View Analysis
🧬 Theorist Proposes novel mechanisms and generates creative hypotheses

Novel Therapeutic Hypotheses for Gut-Brain Axis in Parkinson's Disease

Hypothesis 1: Bacterial Curli Amyloid Mimicry Pathway

Title: Targeting Bacterial Curli Fibrils to Prevent α-Synuclein Cross-Seeding

Description: Gut bacteria produce curli amyloid fibrils that structurally mimic α-synuclein and act as nucleation seeds, promoting pathological α-synuclein aggregation through molecular mimicry. Therapeutic intervention with curli synthesis inhibitors (like Congo Red derivatives) could prevent this cross-kingdom amyloid seeding and halt early PD pathogenesis.

Target: CsgA (c

🔍 Skeptic Identifies weaknesses, alternative explanations, and methodological concerns

Critical Evaluation of Gut-Brain Axis Hypotheses in Parkinson's Disease

Hypothesis 1: Bacterial Curli Amyloid Mimicry Pathway

Weaknesses in Evidence:

  • Cross-seeding specificity: The supporting studies primarily used C. elegans models, which lack the complex human blood-brain barrier and immune system (PMID:26751493). Cross-kingdom amyloid interactions may not translate to mammalian systems.
  • Causation vs. correlation: The presence of bacterial amyloids in PD patients doesn't establish causation - they could be a consequence rather than cause of gut dysbiosis.
  • **Selectivi

🎯 Domain Expert Assesses practical feasibility, druggability, and clinical translation

Practical Feasibility Assessment: Gut-Brain Axis PD Hypotheses

HYPOTHESIS 1: Bacterial Curli Amyloid Inhibition

Druggability: MODERATE

Chemical Matter & Tool Compounds:

  • Congo Red derivatives: FN-1501 (developed by Funxional Therapeutics) - synthetic Congo Red analog with improved pharmacokinetics
  • Curcumin analogs: EF24, Difluorinated curcumin (showed anti-amyloid activity in preclinical studies)
  • Small molecule amyloid inhibitors: Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), Quercetin, Resveratrol

Existing Clinical Candidates:

  • **None specifically targeting bacterial

Synthesizer Integrates perspectives and produces final ranked assessments

Price History

0.250.500.75 evidence: market_dynamics_seed (2026-04-02 18:16)created: (2026-04-02T06:14)created: post_process (2026-04-02T07:45)score_update: post_process (2026-04-02T08:39)score_update: post_process (2026-04-02T09:33)evidence: evidence_update (2026-04-02T10:27)evidence: evidence_update (2026-04-02T11:21)debate: debate_engine (2026-04-02T12:15)evidence: evidence_update (2026-04-02T13:09)debate: debate_engine (2026-04-02T14:04)evidence: market_dynamics (2026-04-02T17:18)evidence: evidence_batch_update (2026-04-04T09:08) 1.00 0.00 2026-04-022026-04-042026-04-15 Market PriceScoreevidencedebate 120 events
7d Trend
Stable
7d Momentum
▼ 5.2%
Volatility
Medium
0.0208
Events (7d)
50
⚡ Price Movement Log Recent 15 events
Event Price Change Source Time
Recalibrated $0.521 ▼ 0.4% 2026-04-12 10:15
Recalibrated $0.523 ▼ 0.5% 2026-04-10 15:58
Recalibrated $0.526 ▲ 0.6% 2026-04-10 15:53
Recalibrated $0.522 ▼ 3.8% 2026-04-08 18:39
Recalibrated $0.543 ▼ 11.5% 2026-04-06 04:04
Recalibrated $0.614 ▼ 0.5% 2026-04-04 16:38
Recalibrated $0.617 ▲ 0.9% 2026-04-04 16:02
📄 New Evidence $0.612 ▼ 0.7% evidence_batch_update 2026-04-04 09:08
Recalibrated $0.616 ▼ 1.5% 2026-04-03 23:46
Recalibrated $0.625 ▲ 7.4% market_dynamics 2026-04-03 01:06
Recalibrated $0.582 ▼ 9.3% market_dynamics 2026-04-03 01:06
Recalibrated $0.642 ▲ 25.9% 2026-04-02 21:55
Recalibrated $0.510 ▼ 10.5% market_recalibrate 2026-04-02 19:14
📄 New Evidence $0.570 ▼ 9.9% market_dynamics 2026-04-02 17:18
💬 Debate Round $0.633 ▲ 4.6% debate_engine 2026-04-02 14:04

Clinical Trials (5) Relevance: 44%

0
Active
0
Completed
282
Total Enrolled
PHASE1
Highest Phase
RAPA-501 Therapy for ALS PHASE2
RECRUITING · NCT04220190 · Rapa Therapeutics LLC
41 enrolled · 2025-01-02 · → 2026-07-01
RAPA-501-ALS is a phase 2/3 expansion cohort study of RAPA-501 autologous hybrid TREG/Th2 cells in patients living with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (pwALS).
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
RAPA-501 Autologous T stem cells
MAD Phase I Study to Investigate Contraloid Acetate PHASE1
COMPLETED · NCT03955380 · Prof. Dr. Dieter Willbold
24 enrolled · 2018-12-12 · → 2019-04-03
This is a single-center multiple-ascending-dose clinical trial assessing the safety and tolerability of oral dosing of Contraloid acetate in healthy volunteers. The study drug Contraloid (alias RD2, a
Alzheimer Dementia Alzheimer Disease
Contraloid
Cerebrovascular Reactivity and Oxygen Metabolism as Markers of Neurodegeneration After Traumatic Brain Injury N/A
UNKNOWN · NCT04820881 · Washington D.C. Veterans Affairs Medical Center
60 enrolled · 2021-10-01 · → 2024-09
This grant award entitled, "Cerebrovascular Reactivity and Oxygen Metabolism as Markers for Neurodegeneration after Traumatic Brain Injury" (hereafter, "Neurovascular Study"), aims to determine if neu
Neurodegenerative Diseases
Stereotactic Intracerebral Injection of Allogenic IPSC-DAPs in Patients With Parkinson's Disease PHASE1
NOT_YET_RECRUITING · NCT07212088 · iCamuno Biotherapeutics Ltd.
12 enrolled · 2026-02-28 · → 2027-12-15
Parkinson's disease is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by high morbidity due to the limited regenerative capacity of dopaminergic neurons in the brain. Current drug treatments p
Parkinson Disease
ALC01 therapy
MRI Biomarkers in ALS N/A
COMPLETED · NCT02405182 · University of Alberta
145 enrolled · 2014-09 · → 2019-03
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a disabling and rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disorder. There is no treatment that significantly slows progression. Increasing age is an important risk f
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ALS Motor Neuron Diseases
Magnetic Resonance Imaging

📚 Cited Papers (36)

Paper:23396473
1 figure
Figures
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
deep_link
Dendritic spine abnormalities in amyloid precursor protein transgenic mice demonstrated by gene transfer and intravital multiphoton microscopy.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2005) · PMID:16079410
1 figure
Figures
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
deep_link
Therapeutic potentials of plant iridoids in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases: A review.
European journal of medicinal chemistry (2019) · PMID:30877973
1 figure
Figures
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
deep_link
Management of Diabetes Mellitus in Normal Renal Function, Renal Dysfunction and Renal Transplant Recipients, Focusing on Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Agonist: A Review Based upon Current Evidence.
International journal of molecular sciences (2019) · PMID:31261624
1 figure
Figure 1
Figure 1
The pathogenesis of new-onset diabetes after transplantation (NODAT). Smaller arrows indicate increase (upward) and decrease (downward). Larger arrows indicate the cause.
pmc_api
Paper:16079410
No extracted figures yet
Paper:26354860
No extracted figures yet
Paper:29959379
No extracted figures yet
Paper:30877973
No extracted figures yet
Paper:31261624
No extracted figures yet
Paper:31811349
No extracted figures yet
Paper:34943934
No extracted figures yet
Paper:36117625
No extracted figures yet

📓 Linked Notebooks (4)

📓 What are the mechanisms by which gut microbiome dysbiosis influences Parkinson's disease pathogenesis through the gut-brain axis? - Rich Analysis
Rich notebook with gene expression, pathway enrichment, and statistical analysis
📓 What are the mechanisms by which gut microbiome dysbiosis influences Parkinson's disease pathogenesis through the gut-brain axis? — Analysis Notebook
Jupyter notebook for analysis SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225149: What are the mechanisms underlying what are the mechanisms by which gut microbiome dysbiosis influences parkinson's disease pathogenes …
📓 What are the mechanisms by which gut microbiome dysbiosis influences Parkinson's disease pathogenesis through the gut-brain axis? — Rich Analysis
Enhanced notebook with gene expression, pathway enrichment, score heatmaps, and statistical analysis. What are the mechanisms underlying what are the mechanisms by which gut microbiome dysbiosis influ …
📓 Gut Microbiome Dysbiosis and Parkinson's Disease via the Gut-Brain Axis
Real Forge-powered analysis: PubMed search, STRING PPI, Reactome pathways, gene annotations for gut-brain axis / Parkinson's disease research.
→ Browse all notebooks

⚔ Arena Performance

No arena matches recorded yet. Browse Arenas
→ Browse all arenas & tournaments

Wiki Pages

Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF)proteinBDNF GenegeneYoga Therapy for NeurodegenerationtherapeuticYAP/TEAD Pathway Modulators for NeurodegenerationtherapeuticWnt Signaling Modulators for Neurodegenerationtherapeuticvitamin-d-therapy-neurodegenerationtherapeuticVitamin B Complex Therapy for NeurodegenerationtherapeuticVIP/VPAC Receptor Modulators for NeurodegenerationtherapeuticUrolithin A for NeurodegenerationtherapeuticUrolithin A for Neurodegenerationtherapeutictudca-udca-neurodegenerationtherapeuticTRPM8 Agonists for NeurodegenerationtherapeuticTriple Incretin Agonists (GLP-1/GIP/Glucagon) for therapeuticTREM2 Agonist Therapy for NeurodegenerationtherapeuticTranscranial Magnetic Stimulation Therapy for Neurtherapeutic

KG Entities (82)

AADCAGEAGERAHRAHR, IL10, TGFB1APPASCAlpha-synuclein aggregation / synaptic vBDNFCASP1CHRNA7CLDN1CLDN1, OCLN, ZO1, MLCKCREB1CSGADDCDNMT1GLP1RGLP1R, BDNFGLP1_receptor

Dependency Graph (5 upstream, 1 downstream)

Depends On
Enteric Nervous System Prion-Like Propagation Blockadebuilds_on (1.0)Gut Barrier Permeability-α-Synuclein Axis Modulationbuilds_on (1.0)Microbial Inflammasome Priming Preventionbuilds_on (1.0)AMPK hypersensitivity in astrocytes creates enhanced mitochondrial rescue responbuilds_on (0.6)Microbial Metabolite-Mediated α-Synuclein Disaggregationbuilds_on (0.6)
Depended On By
Microbiome-Derived Tryptophan Metabolite Neuroprotectionbuilds_on (1.0)

Linked Experiments (10)

Alpha-Synuclein Aggregation Triggers — Sporadic PD Initiation Mechanismsclinical | tests | 0.46Microbiome-Gut Barrier Signatures in ALS — Experiment Designclinical | tests | 0.46Gut-Brain Axis Pathogenesis in Parkinson's Disease — Mechanism and Interventionclinical | tests | 0.46Gut Microbiome-Derived Metabolites in Alpha-Synuclein Propagationclinical | tests | 0.46GLP-1 Agonist Neuroprotection Mechanism in PDclinical | tests | 0.46SCFA-Mediated Neuroinflammation in Alzheimer's Diseaseclinical | tests | 0.46GLP-1 Agonist Responder Prediction Study — Precision Medicine for Neuroprotectioclinical | tests | 0.46Non-Dopaminergic Neurotransmitter Degeneration in PD - Experiment Designclinical | tests | 0.46Non-Motor Symptom Progression in Parkinson's Disease — Mechanisms and Biomarkersclinical | tests | 0.46Microbiome-Gut-Brain Axis in Alzheimer's Disease — mechanism and interventionclinical | tests | 0.46

Related Hypotheses

SASP-Mediated Complement Cascade Amplification
Score: 0.703 | neurodegeneration
TREM2-Dependent Microglial Senescence Transition
Score: 0.692 | neurodegeneration
H2: Indole-3-Propionate (IPA) as the Actual Neuroprotective Effector
Score: 0.675 | neurodegeneration
Nutrient-Sensing Epigenetic Circuit Reactivation
Score: 0.670 | neurodegeneration
Transcriptional Autophagy-Lysosome Coupling
Score: 0.665 | neurodegeneration

Estimated Development

Estimated Cost
$2M
Timeline
2.0 years

🧪 Falsifiable Predictions (3)

3 total 0 confirmed 0 falsified
If hypothesis is true, intervention maintain GLP1R occupancy above 80% throughout the dosing interval
pending conf: 0.70
Expected outcome: maintain GLP1R occupancy above 80% throughout the dosing interval
Falsified by: Intervention fails to maintain GLP1R occupancy above 80% throughout the dosing interval
If hypothesis is true, intervention emphasize superior disease-modifying potential versus purely symptomatic benefits
pending conf: 0.70
Expected outcome: emphasize superior disease-modifying potential versus purely symptomatic benefits
Falsified by: Intervention fails to emphasize superior disease-modifying potential versus purely symptomatic benefits
If hypothesis is true, intervention provide personalized dosing recommendations and early detection of treatment response or adverse events
pending conf: 0.70
Expected outcome: provide personalized dosing recommendations and early detection of treatment response or adverse events
Falsified by: Intervention fails to provide personalized dosing recommendations and early detection of treatment response or adverse events

Knowledge Subgraph (494 edges)

activates (3)

inflammasome_complex neuroinflammation_pathway
vagal_signaling_pathway neuroprotection
tight_junction_proteins intestinal_barrier

associated with (28)

gut_microbiome SCFA_production
SCFA_production blood_brain_barrier
NLRP3 neurodegeneration
CASP1 neurodegeneration
IL1B neurodegeneration
...and 23 more

causes (2)

neuroinflammation_pathway Parkinsons_disease
protein_aggregation_pathway Parkinsons_disease

co associated with (38)

AGER RAGE
AGER CHRNA7
AGER TLR4
CHRNA7 TLR4
CLDN1, OCLN, ZO1, MLCK SNCA, HSPA1A, DNMT1
...and 33 more

co discussed (329)

ASC PYCARD
NLRP3 TAU
APP NLRP3
NLRP3 STAT3
DNMT1 HSP70
...and 324 more

component of (1)

NLRP3 inflammasome_complex

encodes (2)

GLP1R GLP1_receptor
SNCA alpha_synuclein

generated (5)

SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225155 h-e7e1f943
SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225155 h-74777459
SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225155 h-6c83282d
SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225155 h-f9c6fa3f
SDA-2026-04-01-gap-20260401-225155 h-7bb47d7a

implicated in (11)

NLRP3, CASP1, IL1B, PYCARD neurodegeneration
GLP1R, BDNF neurodegeneration
CLDN1, OCLN, ZO1, MLCK neurodegeneration
SNCA, HSPA1A, DNMT1 neurodegeneration
TLR4, SNCA neurodegeneration
...and 6 more

interacts with (42)

NLRP3 CASP1
NLRP3 IL1B
NLRP3 PYCARD
CASP1 NLRP3
CASP1 IL1B
...and 37 more

participates in (19)

alpha_synuclein protein_aggregation_pathway
NLRP3 NLRP3 inflammasome activation
CASP1 NLRP3 inflammasome activation
IL1B NLRP3 inflammasome activation
PYCARD NLRP3 inflammasome activation
...and 14 more

regulates (1)

GLP1_receptor vagal_signaling_pathway

targets (13)

h-e7e1f943 NLRP3, CASP1, IL1B, PYCARD
h-ee1df336 GLP1R, BDNF
h-6c83282d CLDN1, OCLN, ZO1, MLCK
h-74777459 SNCA, HSPA1A, DNMT1
h-2e7eb2ea TLR4, SNCA
...and 8 more

Mechanism Pathway for GLP1R, BDNF

Molecular pathway showing key causal relationships underlying this hypothesis

graph TD
    h_ee1df336["h-ee1df336"] -->|targets| GLP1R__BDNF["GLP1R, BDNF"]
    GLP1R__BDNF_1["GLP1R, BDNF"] -->|associated with| neurodegeneration["neurodegeneration"]
    GLP1R__BDNF_2["GLP1R, BDNF"] -->|implicated in| neurodegeneration_3["neurodegeneration"]
    CLDN1__OCLN__ZO1__MLCK["CLDN1, OCLN, ZO1, MLCK"] -->|co associated with| GLP1R__BDNF_4["GLP1R, BDNF"]
    AHR__IL10__TGFB1["AHR, IL10, TGFB1"] -->|co associated with| GLP1R__BDNF_5["GLP1R, BDNF"]
    GLP1R__BDNF_6["GLP1R, BDNF"] -->|co associated with| NLRP3__CASP1__IL1B__PYCAR["NLRP3, CASP1, IL1B, PYCARD"]
    GLP1R__BDNF_7["GLP1R, BDNF"] -->|co associated with| SNCA__HSPA1A__DNMT1["SNCA, HSPA1A, DNMT1"]
    GLP1R__BDNF_8["GLP1R, BDNF"] -->|co associated with| TH__AADC["TH, AADC"]
    GLP1R__BDNF_9["GLP1R, BDNF"] -->|co associated with| TLR4__SNCA["TLR4, SNCA"]
    style h_ee1df336 fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style GLP1R__BDNF fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style GLP1R__BDNF_1 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style neurodegeneration fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style GLP1R__BDNF_2 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style neurodegeneration_3 fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style CLDN1__OCLN__ZO1__MLCK fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style GLP1R__BDNF_4 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style AHR__IL10__TGFB1 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style GLP1R__BDNF_5 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style GLP1R__BDNF_6 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style NLRP3__CASP1__IL1B__PYCAR fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style GLP1R__BDNF_7 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style SNCA__HSPA1A__DNMT1 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style GLP1R__BDNF_8 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style TH__AADC fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style GLP1R__BDNF_9 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
    style TLR4__SNCA fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000

3D Protein Structure

🧬 GLP1R — PDB 6X18 Click to expand 3D viewer

Experimental structure from RCSB PDB | Powered by Mol* | Rotate: click+drag | Zoom: scroll | Reset: right-click

Source Analysis

What are the mechanisms by which gut microbiome dysbiosis influences Parkinson's disease pathogenesis through the gut-brain axis?

neurodegeneration | 2026-04-01 | completed