GLPwatch

The stimulation of GLP-1 secretion and delivery of GLP-1 agonists via nanostructured lipid carriers.

Nanoscale · 2018

Last updated 2026-05-28

A study tested whether lipid-based nanoparticles could both trigger the body’s natural release of GLP-1 and carry GLP-1 drugs (exenatide and liraglutide) to the gut. In lab tests, the nanoparticles boosted GLP-1 release from gut cells and increased exenatide’s ability to cross a gut-cell barrier by 2.9 times. When given to normal mice, the nanoparticle-loaded drugs did not lower blood sugar. The particles mainly stuck to the gut’s mucus layer, suggesting they need further design changes to reach deeper tissue.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNanoscale, 2018
Citations37
Relative citation ratio1.94
NIH percentile73
Molecules

Abstract

Nanoparticulate based drug delivery systems have been extensively studied to efficiently encapsulate and deliver peptides orally. However, most of the existing data mainly focus on the nanoparticles as a drug carrier, but the ability of nanoparticles having a biological effect has not been exploited. Herein, we hypothesize that nanostructured lipid carriers (NLCs) could activate the endogenous glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) secretion and also act as oral delivery systems for GLP-1 analogs (exenatide and liraglutide). NLCs effectively encapsulated the peptides, the majority of which were only released under the intestinal conditions. NLCs, with and without peptide encapsulation, showed effective induction of GLP-1 secretion in vitro from the enteroendocrinal L-cells (GLUTag). NLCs also showed a 2.9-fold increase in the permeability of exenatide across the intestinal cell monolayer. The intestinal administration of the exenatide and liraglutide loaded NLCs did not demonstrate any glucose lowering effect on normal mice. Further, ex vivo studies depicted that the NLCs mainly adhered to the mucus layer. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that NLCs need further optimization to overcome the mucosal barrier in the intestine; nonetheless, this study also presents a promising strategy to use a dual-action drug delivery nanosystem which synergizes its own biological effect and that of the encapsulated drug molecule.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 29235598 ↗