D-Allulose Reduces Weight More Persistently than Oral Semaglutide While Both Equally Elevate Grip Strength in Diet-Induced Obese Mice
Yermek Rakhat, Seiya Banno, Dauren Zhantleu, Shin Tsunekawa, Daisuke Yabe, Yutaka Seino, Yusaku Iwasaki, Toshihiko Yada

TL;DR
D-Allulose and oral semaglutide both reduce weight and improve muscle strength in obese mice, but D-Allulose maintains weight loss longer.
Contribution
D-Allulose shows more persistent weight loss than oral semaglutide in diet-induced obese mice.
Findings
D-Allulose and oral semaglutide both reduce food intake and body weight in the early treatment phase.
D-Allulose maintains weight loss longer than oral semaglutide after treatment ends.
Both substances increase muscle strength, but D-Allulose uniquely inhibits orexigenic neurons in the hypothalamus.
Abstract
Background: Rare sugar D-Allulose, a zero-calorie sweetener, markedly ameliorates obesity. It reportedly stimulates the release of endogenous glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) to activate vagal afferent and directly influences the neurons in hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARH), thus evoking vagal and central nervous routes. D-Allulose can now be produced substantially, being expected for diet therapy. Oral form GLP-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA), Oral semaglutide (O-Sema), without injection markedly ameliorates obesity. It evokes only central nervous route. Thus, these GLP-1-based substances utilize common/distinct routes, suggesting common/distinct effects on obesity and related disorders including sarcopenia. To address it, this study precisely compared their effects. Methods: O-Sema and D-Allulose were administered to diet-induced obese mice under identical conditions, equivalent doses,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiet, Metabolism, and Disease · Diet and metabolism studies · Regulation of Appetite and Obesity
