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Extending residence time and stability of peptides by protected graft copolymer (PGC) excipient: GLP-1 example.

Pharm Res · 2012

Last updated 2026-05-28

In tests on diabetic rats, a once-weekly injection of GLP-1 combined with a special protective compound (PGC) kept blood sugar control (HbA1c) at levels similar to rats given twice-daily exendin. The PGC compound bound tightly to GLP-1, slowed its breakdown by enzymes, and kept the drug active in the body for at least 4 days.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalPharm Res, 2012
Citations10
Relative citation ratio0.36
NIH percentile22
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine whether a Protected Graft Copolymer (PGC) containing fatty acid can be used as a stabilizing excipient for GLP-1 and whether PGC/GLP-1 given once a week can be an effective treatment for diabetes. METHODS: To create a PGC excipient, polylysine was grafted with methoxypolyethyleneglycol and fatty acid at the epsilon amino groups. We performed evaluation of the binding of excipient to GLP-1, the DPP IV sensitivity of GLP-1 formulated with PGC as the excipient, the in vitro bio-activity of excipient-formulated GLP-1, the in vivo pharmacokinetics of excipient-formulated GLP-1, and the efficacy of the excipient-formulated GLP-1 in diabetic rats. RESULTS: We showed reproducible synthesis of PGC excipient, high affinity binding of PGC to GLP-1, slowed protease degradation of excipient-formulated GLP-1, and that excipient-formulated GLP-1 induced calcium influx in INS cells. Excipient-formulated GLP-1 stays in the blood for at least 4 days. When excipient-formulated GLP-1 was given subcutaneously once a week to diabetic ZDF rats, a significant reduction of HbA1c compared to control was observed. The reduction is similar to diabetic ZDF rats given exendin twice a day. CONCLUSIONS: PGC can be an ideal in vivo stabilizing excipient for biologically labile peptides.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 21830140 ↗