An Albumin Sandwich Enhances in Vivo Circulation and Stability of Metabolically Labile Peptides.
Bioconjug Chem · 2019
Last updated 2026-05-28Researchers developed a new method to extend the time that short-lived drugs stay active in the body by using a molecule called N(tEB) to bind to albumin, a protein in the blood. In a test with diabetic mice, a drug called exendin-4 combined with N(tEB) improved blood sugar control better than two other versions of the drug, including semaglutide, a widely used weekly treatment.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Bioconjug Chem, 2019 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 17 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.74 |
| NIH percentile | 40 |
| Molecules | — |
Abstract
The effectiveness of numerous molecular drugs is hampered by their poor pharmacokinetics. Different from previous approaches with limited effectiveness, most recently, emerging high-affinity albumin binding moieties (ABMs) for in vivo hitchhiking of endogenous albumin opens up an avenue to chaperone small molecules for long-acting therapeutics. Although several FDA-approved fatty acids have shown prolonged residence and therapeutic effect, an easily synthesized, water-soluble, and high-efficiency ABM with versatile drug loading ability is urgently needed to improve the therapeutic efficacy of short-lived constructs. We herein identified an ideal bivalent Evans blue derivative, denoted as N(tEB), as a smart ABM-delivery platform to chaperone short-lived molecules, through both computational modeling screening and efficient synthetic schemes. The optimal N(tEB) could reversibly link two molecules of albumin through its two binding heads with a preferable spacer, resulting in significantly extended circulation half-life of a preloaded cargo and water-soluble. Notably, this in situ dimerization of albumin was able to sandwich peptide therapeutics to protect them from proteolysis. As an application, we conjugated N(tEB) with exendin-4 for long-acting glucose control in a diabetic mouse model, and it was superior to both previously tested NtEB-exendin-4 (Abextide) and the newly FDA-approved semaglutide, which has been arguably the best commercial weekly formula so far. Hence, this novel albumin binder has excellent clinical potential for next-generation biomimetic drug delivery systems.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 31082207 ↗