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Oligoarginine-linked polymers as a new class of penetration enhancers.

J Control Release · 2010

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a mouse study, insulin alone at a dose of 10 IU/kg slightly reduced blood sugar levels when given nasally. However, when insulin was combined with a polymer linked to D-octaarginine at a 2% grafting degree, the blood sugar-lowering effect of insulin increased significantly. The polymer’s ability to enhance insulin’s effect grew stronger as more D-octaarginine was added, up to a 17% grafting degree, which also helped a larger molecule pass through cell membranes in lab tests.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Control Release, 2010
Citations33
Relative citation ratio1.06
NIH percentile52
Molecules

Abstract

Oligoarginines, which are known as cell-penetrating peptides, enhance the cellular uptake of poorly membrane-permeable bioactive molecules that are chemically conjugated to them. We designed a novel polymer: oligoarginine-linked poly(N-vinylacetamide-co-acrylic acid), with the expectation that the polymers will enhance the cellular uptake of the bioactive molecules that are physically mixed with them. Oligoarginines were grafted onto the polymer backbone through the chemical reaction with acrylic acid functional groups. The changes in the blood glucose concentration after nasal administration of insulin with and without the polymer were monitored in mice. The blood glucose concentration was slightly reduced when insulin was given solely at a dose of 10IU/kg. A D-octaarginine-linked poly(N-vinylacetamide-co-acrylic acid) with a grafting degree of 2% significantly enhanced the insulin-induced hypoglycemic effect. A similar enhancement was not observed when the polymer was substituted with intact D-octaarginine. The penetration-enhancing function of D-octaarginine-linked poly(N-vinylacetamide-co-acrylic acid) increased dramatically with an increase in the grafting degree of D-octaarginine. Substitution of D-octaarginine with the corresponding optical isomer and an increase in the number of arginine residues rather reduced the penetration-enhancing function. In vitro cell studies also indicated that a D-octaarginine-linked poly(N-vinylacetamide-co-acrylic acid) with a grafting degree of 17% enabled fluorescein isothiocyanate-dextran to effectively penetrate the cell membrane. Results demonstrated that our oligoarginine-linked polymer has a potential to provide a new class of penetration enhancers.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 20800631 ↗