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Oral delivery of an anti-diabetic peptide drug via conjugation and complexation with low molecular weight chitosan.

J Control Release · 2013

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers developed an oral version of the diabetes drug exendin-4 by attaching it to a compound called low molecular weight chitosan, forming tiny particles about 101 nanometers in size. In lab tests, this oral version worked as well as the injected version at stimulating insulin release, and when given to animals, it reached peak levels of 344 picograms per milliliter in the blood after 6 hours, with an overall effectiveness of 6.4% compared to the injected drug.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Control Release, 2013
Citations42
Relative citation ratio1.50
NIH percentile64
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Despite the therapeutic potential of exendin-4 as a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) mimetic for the treatment of type 2 diabetes, its utility has so far been limited because of the low level of patient compliance due to the requirement for frequent injections. In this study, an orally available exendin-4 was produced by conjugating it to low molecular weight chitosan (LMWC). Conjugation between the LMWC and cysteinylated exendin-4 was carried out using a cleavable linker system in order to maximize the availability of the active peptide. The LMWC-exendin-4 conjugate formed a nanoparticle structure with a mean particle size of 101 ± 41 nm through complexation between the positively charged LMWC backbone and the negatively charged exendin-4 of individual conjugate molecules. The biological activity of the LMWC-exendin-4 conjugate was evaluated in an INS-1 cell line. The LMWC-exendin-4 conjugate stimulated insulin secretion in a dose dependent manner as similar as that of native exendin-4. From the pharmacokinetic study after oral administration of the conjugate, a C(max) value of 344 pg/mL and a T(max) of 6 h were observed, and the bioavailability, relative to the subcutaneous counterpart, was found to be 6.4%. Furthermore, the absorbed exendin-4 demonstrated a significantly enhanced hypoglycemic effect. These results suggest that the LMWC-exendin-4 conjugate could be used as a potential oral anti-diabetic agent for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 23747732 ↗