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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 2026-05-28

Researchers 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.

JournalJ Control Release, 2012
Citations53
Relative citation ratio1.95
NIH percentile73
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 ↗