Cagrillinitide
Cagrilintide Product Description — Research Use Only
Cagrilintide is a long-acting research peptide analog of amylin, a hormone involved in appetite signaling, satiety response, gastric-emptying pathways, and energy-balance regulation. It is commonly studied for its activity at amylin and calcitonin receptor pathways, which are connected to appetite control and metabolic research.
Research on Cagrilintide has most commonly focused on appetite signaling, satiety response, food-intake regulation, body-weight research, gastric-emptying pathways, and metabolic function. Published studies describe Cagrilintide as a long-acting amylin analog that activates amylin receptor subtypes and calcitonin receptor pathways.
Cagrilintide is commonly studied for:
Appetite signaling — how hunger and fullness signals are regulated
Satiety response — how research models respond to “feeling full” signals
Food-intake regulation — pathways connected to reduced food intake
Gastric-emptying pathways — how digestion speed may influence appetite and fullness
Body-weight research — markers connected to weight regulation and energy balance
Metabolic function — how energy intake and energy use are regulated
Amylin receptor activity — how Cagrilintide interacts with amylin-related receptor pathways
Cagrilintide has been studied because amylin-based peptides are involved in appetite and satiety signaling. Structural research has shown Cagrilintide binding to active amylin receptor subtypes and the calcitonin receptor, supporting its use in receptor-activity and metabolic-pathway research.
For research use only. Not for human consumption, medical use, diagnostic use, or therapeutic application.
