Engineering a novel protease-based Exendin-4 derivative for type 2 antidiabetic therapeutics.
Eur J Med Chem · 2018
Last updated 2026-05-28Researchers created a modified version of the diabetes drug Exendin-4, called LEx4, which lasts longer in the body. In tests on mice and rats, LEx4 lowered blood sugar more effectively than the original drug and stayed active for a longer time, with effects lasting up to 24 hours. The modified drug also showed a 3.3 times longer elimination half-life in rats compared to the original Exendin-4.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Eur J Med Chem, 2018 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 15 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.82 |
| NIH percentile | 44 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
To develop an effective long-acting antidiabetic agent, we designed a novel Exendin-4 derivative (termed LEx4) containing an albumin-binding domain (ABD), a protease-cleavable linker and a native Exendin-4. Here, we present the LEx4 with balanced glucoregulatory activity and prolonged in vivo activity. As a first step, the LEx4 with purity more than 99% was prepared. Microscale thermophoresis (MST) results demonstrated that LEx4 associates with rat and monkey serum albumin with high-affinity (K = 1.26 × 10 M and 1.52 × 10 M, respectively). Then the stability test in vitro showed the enhanced antiproteolytic ability of LEx4 in rat and human plasma compared to native Exendin-4. Oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) in type 2 diabetic mice showed the glucose-lowering efficacy of LEx4 was clearly dosage-dependent within 25-250 nmol/kg. In addition, the protracted antidiabetic effects of LEx4 were further confirmed by both multiple OGTTs and hypoglycemic efficacies test in type 2 diabetic mice. In Sprague Dawley (SD) rats, LEx4 also showed 3.3-fold longer elimination half-life (t) than native Exendin-4. Furthermore, once daily injection of LEx4 to db/db mice achieved long-term beneficial effects on body weight, blood biochemical values, glucose tolerance and pancreatic tissue. We believe LEx4 has superior pharmaceutical potential as a therapeutic drug to against type-2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) based on these results. This strategy of albumin binding is also applicable to other bioactive peptides for development of long-acting therapeutic drugs.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 29597167 ↗