18 June 2025
New research discovery could advance drug treatments for diabetes and obesity
By Elizabeth McMeekin
Scientists have unlocked new details on important ‘receptor’ proteins –promising targets for the creation of novel drugs for metabolic conditions ranging from diabetes to obesity and inflammatory disorders.
The discovery – published today in Nature and led by the University of Glasgow, Queens University Belfast and the University of Pittsburgh – describes ‘atomic level structures’ of an important receptor protein in complex with three different activators, all of which interact and produce their effects in distinct ways.
By harnessing and combining the power of structural biology, computational chemistry, pharmacology and cell signalling, the researchers looked at a receptor which is normally activated by the short chain fatty acids that are made by the fermentation of fibre in the diet by ‘good’ gut bacteria and which promote positive health outcomes – from the gut to the brain.
This receptor — FFA2 – is the primary receptor for short chain fatty acids in the body and because it is present in many immune cells, the pancreas, adipocytes and cells that generate hormones that control insulin levels and how full we feel, is a promising drug target for metabolic disorders including diabetes and obesity.
The researchers used three different chemical classes of synthetic ‘ligands’ identified by the pharmaceutical industry to activate this receptor and found each to work on FFA2 at different places.
The work led the researchers to demonstrate that each of these ligands makes short chain fatty acids function more effectively – but in different ways – allowing for the possibility of tuning this selectivity to improve pancreatic function and the roles of white blood immune cells, or control fat storage in adipose tissue.
Dr Irina Tikhonova from the School of Pharmacy at Queen’s University Belfast said: “Our molecular dynamics simulations using the Kelvin-2 supercomputer at Queen’s revealed how each compound uniquely changes the receptor’s shape, explaining their different signalling profiles. This computational approach was essential for connecting static structures with dynamic biological function.”
- The study, ‘Allosteric modulation and biased signalling at free fatty acid receptor 2,’ is published in Nature. The study was supported by funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the USA, the Medical Research Council (UK), the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (UK), the Lundbeck Foundation, and the EPSRC.

