Self-assembled glycol chitosan nanogels containing palmityl-acylated exendin-4 peptide as a long-acting anti-diabetic inhalation system.
J Control Release · 2012
Last updated 2026-05-28Researchers created tiny, spherical nanogels (~220 nm) designed to deliver a diabetes drug (exendin-4) directly to the lungs. When tested in diabetic mice, the drug-loaded nanogels stayed in the lungs for about 72 hours and controlled blood sugar for a longer time than the unmodified drug. Tests in human lung cells and mouse lungs showed no significant harm from the nanogels.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Control Release, 2012 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 53 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.95 |
| NIH percentile | 73 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
Inhalable deoxycholic acid-modified glycol chitosan (DOCA-GC) nanogels containing palmityl acylated exendin-4 (Ex4-C16) were prepared by self-assembly and characterized physicochemically. The lung deposition of DOCA-GC nanogels was monitored using an infrared imaging system, and the hypoglycemia caused by Ex4-C16-loaded DOCA-GC nanogels was evaluated after pulmonary administration in type 2 diabetic db/db mice. The cytotoxicities and lung histologies induced by DOCA-GC nanogels were examined in human lung epithelial cells (A549 and Calu-3) and db/db mice, respectively. Results showed that the DOCA-GC nanogels prepared were spherical and compact and had a diameter of ~220 nm. Although the incorporation of Ex4-C16 (50.9±7.8%) into DOCA-GC nanogels was significantly lower than that of Ex4 (81.4±4.9%), the Ex4-C16 release from DOCA-GC nanogels was greatly delayed vs. Ex4. DOCA-GC nanogels were deposited rapidly after pulmonary administration and remained in the lungs for ~72 h. Furthermore, the hypoglycemic duration of inhaled Ex4-C16 nanogels was much greater than that of Ex4 nanogels in db/db mice. Cytotoxicity results of DOCA-GC nanogels were considered acceptable, and the tissue histologies of mouse lungs administered nanogels did not show any significant difference vs. control lungs. The authors believe that Ex4-C16 DOCA-GC nanogels offer a long-acting inhalation delivery system for treating type 2 diabetes.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22634071 ↗