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Move over, Ozempic
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:06 pm
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:06 pm
quote:LINK
A new drug prevents weight gain and fatty liver by controlling magnesium in cells. It made mice stay slim despite lifelong exposure to an unhealthy diet. Credit: Stock
Scientists have unveiled a small-molecule drug that blocks weight gain and liver damage in mice forced to live on sugary, high-fat food.
The compound works by limiting magnesium inside mitochondria—the cell’s power plants—so energy keeps burning instead of stalling. Treated mice quickly slim down and show no signs of fatty-liver disease, hinting at a future therapy against obesity, heart trouble, and cancer tied to poor diets.
Breakthrough Drug Fights Fat and Liver Disease
Researchers at UT Health San Antonio, working with colleagues from the University of Pennsylvania and Cornell, have created a small-molecule drug that keeps mice from gaining weight or developing liver damage even when they eat a lifetime of sugary, high-fat food.
“When we give this drug to the mice for a short time, they start losing weight. They all become slim,” said Madesh Muniswamy, PhD, professor of medicine in the health science center’s Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long School of Medicine. The study appears in Cell Reports.
“A drug that can reduce the risk of cardiometabolic diseases such as heart attack and stroke, and also reduce the incidence of liver cancer, which can follow fatty liver disease, will make a huge impact.”
Magnesium’s Hidden Role in Metabolism
The team began by asking how magnesium shapes metabolism—the way cells make and burn energy called ATP. Magnesium is the body’s fourth-most abundant charged mineral, vital for blood sugar control, blood pressure, and bone strength. Yet the scientists discovered that an excess of magnesium inside mitochondria, the cell’s “power plants,” actually slows energy production.
“It puts the brake on, it just slows down,” said co-lead author Travis R. Madaris, doctoral student in the Muniswamy laboratory at UT Health San Antonio.
When the researchers deleted MRS2, a gene that shuttles magnesium into mitochondria, the animals burned sugar and fat more efficiently. The mice stayed lean and healthy, with liver and fat tissue showing no trace of diet-induced fatty liver disease.
Man Stepping on Brake Pedal
Magnesium acts like a brake on energy production, researchers found. Credit: Shutterstock Drug CPACC Mimics Genetic Effect
The drug, which the researchers call CPACC, accomplishes the same thing. It restricts the amount of magnesium transfer into the power plants. In experiments, the result was again: skinny, healthy mice. UT Health San Antonio has filed a patent application on the drug.
The mice served as a model system of long-term dietary stress precipitated by the calorie-rich, sugary and fatty Western diet. The familiar results of this stress are obesity, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular complications.
“Lowering the mitochondrial magnesium mitigated the adverse effects of prolonged dietary stress,” said co-lead author Manigandan Venkatesan, PhD, postdoctoral fellow in the Muniswamy lab.
Joseph A. Baur, PhD, of the University of Pennsylvania, and Justin J. Wilson, PhD, of Cornell, are among the collaborators. “We came up with the small molecule and Justin synthesized it,” Madaris said.
Major Health Impact Potential “These findings are the result of several years of work,” Muniswamy said. “A drug that can reduce the risk of cardiometabolic diseases such as heart attack and stroke, and also reduce the incidence of liver cancer, which can follow fatty liver disease, will make a huge impact. We will continue its development.”
This post was edited on 7/10/25 at 3:07 pm
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:07 pm to Jim Rockford
mo, mo, mo...magnesiummmmm
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:10 pm to Jim Rockford
All the ogres who said they "ain't NEVER takin no got-dang clot shot gene therapy" will be lining up for the Anti-Fatso Serum 300mg so they can eat at Golden Corral all day without their "sugars" flaring up
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:10 pm to Jim Rockford
quote:
small-molecule drug that blocks ... liver damage

Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:15 pm to Jim Rockford
My first question would be how this targets cells because magnesium is critically important to brain function. Limiting magnesium in the brain seems like mucho not good to me, but it’s not covered here whether is targets certain cells or not.
“Patients saw a 25% reduction in weight….. side effects include becoming retarded….”
“Patients saw a 25% reduction in weight….. side effects include becoming retarded….”
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:15 pm to Jim Rockford
Sign me up for the trial
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:16 pm to Jim Rockford
So can I keep drinking my beer now?
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:17 pm to Jim Rockford
Make a deal with the devil and you will get your due.
There are no shortcuts.
Discipline and hard work are the only true freedoms to being healthy and fit.
To everyone taking these shots, it will come to get you.
There are no shortcuts.
Discipline and hard work are the only true freedoms to being healthy and fit.
To everyone taking these shots, it will come to get you.
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:17 pm to Ingeniero
quote:
All the ogres who said they "ain't NEVER takin no got-dang clot shot gene therapy" will be lining up for the Anti-Fatso Serum 300mg so they can eat at Golden Corral all day without their "sugars" flaring up
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:20 pm to Ingeniero
quote:
All the ogres who said they "ain't NEVER takin no got-dang clot shot gene therapy" will be lining up for the Anti-Fatso Serum 300mg so they can eat at Golden Corral all day without their "sugars" flaring up
What interests me in this is that it mentions fatty liver. I am a 23 BMI so not considered over for my height and weight at all, but for some reason i get Fatty liver off and on. If there is something that can help with it, that would also help avoid down the road liver issues, i'd be interested in it. Not for losing weight though.
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:25 pm to Jim Rockford
quote:
Scientists have unveiled a small-molecule drug that blocks weight gain and liver damage
Can they tweak it so I just get the liver damage benefits?
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:26 pm to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
My first question would be how this targets cells because magnesium is critically important to brain function. Limiting magnesium in the brain seems like mucho not good to me, but it’s not covered here whether is targets certain cells or not.
The people who will line up for this have limited brain function anyway. Can’t imagine it getting any worse for them.
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:26 pm to GrassyKnoll556
Yes and no. The goal should to be as healthy as possible and avoid any type of medical intervention. But certain things go beyond a person's control (I am not saying that all fat people are helpless, but some surely are).
Once you get in a position that medical intervention is necessary, the goal changes. You should be looking the best medical intervention that has the fewest risks and least side effects. If you have diabetes and heart disease, then by all means, take these weight loss drugs.
Once you get in a position that medical intervention is necessary, the goal changes. You should be looking the best medical intervention that has the fewest risks and least side effects. If you have diabetes and heart disease, then by all means, take these weight loss drugs.
This post was edited on 7/10/25 at 3:27 pm
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:29 pm to bulletprooftiger
quote:
But certain things go beyond a person's control (I am not saying that all fat people are helpless, but some surely are).
I estimate this number is between 1-2%
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:29 pm to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
side effects include becoming retarded
I guess no downside for the poliboard, then?
(I keed, I keed)
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:33 pm to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
Patients saw a 25% reduction in weight….. side effects include becoming retarded
So no worries for you, then?
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:34 pm to mdomingue
quote:
So no worries for you, then?
Correct, I’m not fat
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:35 pm to Jim Rockford
and it'll be 2 grand a month and insurance companies will refuse to cover it. Another obesity solution for the rich and famous.
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:35 pm to Jim Rockford
All of this expensive medicine can be avoided if people just quit eating fricking processed food
Posted on 7/10/25 at 3:40 pm to back9Tiger
quote:
If there is something that can help with it, that would also help avoid down the road liver issues,
There is something, it’s called a good diet and exercise. Very limited sugars. Very simple
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