GLPwatch

Effects of the multilayer structures on Exenatide release and bioactivity in microsphere/thermosensitive hydrogel system.

Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces · 2018

Last updated 2026-05-28

A new multilayer system combining microspheres and a thermosensitive hydrogel was tested to deliver Exenatide, a diabetes medication, over 30 days. In mice, a single dose of this system (4.95 micrograms per kilogram) kept blood sugar levels stable between 7.50 and 9.50 millimoles per liter for more than 15 days. The system reduced initial rapid release and protected the drug's effectiveness better than previous methods.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalColloids Surf B Biointerfaces, 2018
Citations20
Relative citation ratio1.18
NIH percentile56
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Traditional polypeptide-loaded PLGA microspheres (PM) using emulsion electrospray techniques often exhibit unsteady release and limited bioactivity. To solve these two problems, an Exenatide (EXT)-loaded multilayer system composed ofPM and thermosensitive hydrogel was prepared by the emulsion electrospray technique in this study. Hydrogel mixture were loaded in PLGA microspheres as Depot-hydrogel to prepare Gel/PM. The PM/Gel and Gel/PM/Gel systems were obtained by dispersion of PM and Gel/PM into hydrogel mixture, respectively. EXT in Gel/PM/Gel showed a constantly in vitro release for 30 days, which was significantly enhanced in comparison of those in the PM/Gel and the Gel/PM. PM/Gel and Gel/PM/Gel showed diminished burst release and no platform period compared with PM and Gel/PM. And these could be because the introduced Matrix-hydrogel outside, as a buffer layer, inhibited burst releases and exhibited a sustained manner. The inner Depot-hydrogelstructure slowed the PLGA degradation rate and drug release rate. As well, more than 15-day blood glucose levels in KKAy mice were greatly maintained at 7.50-9.50 mmol/L after a single subcutaneous injection of Gel/PM/Gel (4.95 μg/kg). Spatial stability and further bioactivity of released EXT were well protected by EXT-hydrogel complexes, and undesirable uptake of EXT and microspheres via phagocytes were also decreased by PEG shell. Thus, the long-acting microspheres/hydrogel multilayer system prepared by emulsion electrospray technique showed promising potentials for loading hydrophilic polypeptides and proteins.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 30015142 ↗

Related research