Glucagon-like peptide-1 is an incretin peptide hormone involved in glucose regulation, insulin signaling, appetite control, gastrointestinal communication, and nutrient-responsive endocrine adaptation. GLP-1 is released after food intake and helps coordinate metabolic responses to nutrient absorption by linking gastrointestinal signaling with pancreatic endocrine activity.
The hormone enhances glucose-dependent insulin secretion, suppresses glucagon release, slows gastric emptying, and contributes to satiety-related signaling within the central nervous system. GLP-1 also influences cardiovascular communication pathways, gastrointestinal motility, and energy balance regulation. Through these actions, it functions as an important endocrine mediator connecting nutrient intake with metabolic homeostasis.
GLP-1 is produced mainly by enteroendocrine L-cells located in the distal small intestine and colon. The hormone is generated through enzymatic processing of the proglucagon precursor molecule. Smaller amounts may also be produced within brainstem structures involved in appetite and autonomic regulation.
Production rises rapidly following nutrient ingestion, especially in response to carbohydrates, fats, and mixed meals. Local gastrointestinal release allows immediate endocrine communication between nutrient sensing pathways and metabolic regulatory systems.
GLP-1 secretion is regulated by nutrient exposure, gastrointestinal neural signaling, vagal activation, glucose availability, bile acid signaling, and intestinal endocrine communication pathways. Meal composition and intestinal nutrient delivery strongly influence secretion dynamics.
GLP-1 acts through G-protein-coupled receptors that activate cyclic AMP pathways, calcium signaling systems, insulin-secretory pathways, and satiety-related neural signaling. The hormone is rapidly degraded by dipeptidyl peptidase-4 enzymes, limiting signaling duration and maintaining meal-responsive endocrine regulation. Through these integrated incretin signaling systems, GLP-1 coordinates glucose homeostasis, appetite signaling, gastrointestinal adaptation, and nutrient-responsive metabolic communication.
Meal-coupled incretin supporting insulin, satiety, and gastric pacing.
