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In vitro metabolic stability of exendin-4: pharmacokinetics and identification of cleavage products.

PLoS One · 2015

Last updated 2026-05-28

In lab tests using rat tissue, the GLP-1 drug exendin-4 broke down faster in kidney tissue than in liver tissue, with a half-life of 7.8 minutes in the kidney and 100.9 minutes in the liver. The study found that enzymes called aminopeptidases, serineproteases, and metalloproteases likely play a role in breaking down exendin-4. The main breakdown products in the kidney were exendin-4(15-39) and exendin-4(16-39), while in the liver, the main product was exendin-4(12-39).

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalPLoS One, 2015
Citations13
Relative citation ratio0.56
NIH percentile32
Molecules

Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate the metabolic stability and cleavage sites of exendin-4 in rat tissue homogenates, as well as to identify the types of proteases involved in exendin-4 degradation. The stability of exendin-4 in kidney and liver homogenates from rats was evaluated using liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS) with gradient elution. Furthermore, we used a combination of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) and LC-ESI-MS/MS to identify the structures of the major degradation products of exendin-4, and peptidase inhibitors were used to characterize exendin-4 degradation in rat liver and kidney homogenates and to identify the proteases involved in exendin-4 metabolism. Exendin-4 had a half-life of 7.8 and 100.9 min in the kidney and liver homogenate, respectively. The enzymes most likely to be involved in the degradation of exendin-4 were aminopeptidases, serineproteases, and metalloproteases. Exendin-4(15-39) and exendin-4(16-39) were the predominant direct exendin-4 metabolites in the kidney, and the main product of exendin-4 metabolism in the liver was exendin-4(12-39). Our results indicated that the metabolism of exendin-4 involved an initial endoproteolytic cleavage and subsequent exoproteolytic digestion. The degradation of exendin-4 in the kidney and liver homogenates followed distinct patterns, and the primary cleavage sites of exendin-4 degradation in rat kidney homogenates were located after AA-14, and -15, whereas those in rat liver homogenates were located after AA-11.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 25723538 ↗