The brain runs more systems than appetite. GLP-1 reaches past hunger into areas the science is still mapping. Some of those reaches are well-mapped. Others are signals the literature has only begun to characterize. This article treats them differently.
About the evidence in this article
Appetite suppression is settled in humans. The mood and alcohol effects are early signals, not confirmed findings. Bone shows a signal with no clear mechanism. Each section below names where the evidence sits before it makes the claim.
Appetite suppression is proven
GLP-1 quiets hunger neurons, activates the satiety pathway, and turns down reward responses to food. This part is well-mapped. The effect is consistent across the human trials and explains most of the weight loss observed in millions of people.
Inflammation: early signals from preclinical research
The brain uses alarm signals to coordinate its response to threats. The research suggests GLP-1 turns the volume down on those signals. In mouse studies, researchers see less neuroinflammation. What that means in humans is still open. The signal reaches inflammatory circuits in the brain. Whether it produces a clinical benefit is not yet established.
Mood: 83% of mouse studies showed an effect, but human evidence lags
Across the preclinical mouse studies, about 83 percent found antidepressant-like effects when GLP-1 activated brain receptors. That is a high proportion. But a mouse brain is not a human brain, and a lab is not a clinic. The signal reaches the mood circuits. Whether it produces a steady mood improvement in people is still being worked out in trials. The evidence points one way but is not settled.
Alcohol: early evidence from human data
The same reward circuitry that quiets food cravings appears to quiet the pull toward alcohol. A 2025 randomized trial in JAMA Psychiatry tested once-weekly semaglutide in adults with alcohol use disorder and found both reduced drinking and a reduced urge to drink. The mechanism likely runs through dopamine adjustment in the reward centers. The finding is striking and worth following, but it is one trial and not yet standard clinical knowledge.
Bone health: mixed results, unclear mechanism
Some studies find higher bone density with GLP-1. Others show mixed or neutral results. The signal reaches the tissues that regulate bone, but the pathway is not characterized. This one is still open, and the evidence does not yet support a conclusion.