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Bifunctional PEGylated exenatide-amylinomimetic hybrids to treat metabolic disorders: an example of long-acting dual hormonal therapeutics.

J Med Chem · 2013

Last updated 2026-05-28

A new experimental drug (Compound 10) combines two diabetes medications—exenatide and davalintide—linked by a long-lasting molecule (PEG) to improve blood sugar control and weight loss. In tests on obese rats, a single dose reduced body weight for at least 21 days, and the drug’s effects lasted about 27 hours in the body, suggesting it could be given once a week in humans. The results were similar to using the two medications separately but with potentially better long-term effects.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Med Chem, 2013
Citations20
Relative citation ratio0.61
NIH percentile34
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity, Mash

Abstract

Peptide hybrids (phybrids) comprising covalently linked peptide hormones can leverage independent biological pathways for additive or synergistic metabolic benefits. PEGylation of biologics offers enhanced stability, duration, and reduced immunogenicity. These two modalities can be combined to produce long-acting therapeutics with dual pharmacology and enhanced efficacy. Compound 10 is composed of an exenatide (AC2993) analogue, AC3174, and an amylinomimetic, davalintide (AC2307), with an intervening 40 kD PEG moiety. It displayed dose-dependent and prolonged efficacy for glucose control and body weight reduction in rodents with superior in vitro and in vivo activities compared to those of a side-chain PEGylated phybrid 6. In diet-induced obese (DIO) rats, the weight-loss efficacy of 10 was similar to that of a combination of PEG-parents 3 and 4. A single dose of 10 elicited sustained body weight reduction in DIO rats for at least 21 days. Compound 10's terminal half-life of ~27 h should translate favorably to weekly dosing in humans.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24144329 ↗

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