Preparation and evaluation of palmitic acid-conjugated exendin-4 with delayed absorption and prolonged circulation for longer hypoglycemia.
Int J Pharm · 2012
Last updated 2026-05-28Researchers modified the diabetes drug exendin-4 by attaching palmitic acid, creating Pal-Ex4, which binds to albumin in the blood 5.6 times more than the original drug. In diabetic rodents, Pal-Ex4 took much longer to be absorbed after injection, stayed in the body longer, and reduced blood sugar levels 4.2 times more than the original exendin-4 when given at a dose of 500 nmol/kg.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Int J Pharm, 2012 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 26 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.84 |
| NIH percentile | 44 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
Albumin-binding achieved by fatty-acylation to drugs is considered to be an effective means of prolonging the circulation lifetimes of short-lived peptides. Here, exendin-4 was modified with palmitic acid, and the particle size and albumin-binding of palmitic acid-conjugated exendin-4 (Pal-Ex4) purified was investigated and visualized. Additionally, its pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics were evaluated in diabetic rodents. Pal-Ex4 had a greater molecular size (~125nm) and its albumin-binding was 5.6-fold that of Ex4. Molecular imaging showed that the subcutaneous absorption of Pal-Ex4 was delayed until 24h post-injection, whereas Ex4 was rapidly absorbed and distributed systemically. Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic results confirmed these observations, for example, times to reach peak concentration and to achieve a blood glucose level nadir were greatly delayed versus Ex4, and the circulating half-life of Pal-Ex4 was much greater than that of Ex4. Consequently, the hypoglycemic degree of Pal-Ex4 (500 nmol/kg) was 4.2 fold greater than Ex4. Our results show that the extended hypoglycemic efficacy of Pal-Ex4 was due to (i) a delayed absorption due to micelle formation and (ii) an increased in vivo circulating half-life due to albumin-binding. We believe that this prototype of exendin-4 has considerable pharmaceutical potential as a systemic type 2 anti-diabetic treatment.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22226877 ↗