Novel strategy for oral peptide delivery in incretin-based diabetes treatment.
Gut · 2020
Last updated 2026-05-28Researchers developed a new oral drug delivery system using tiny capsules to increase the natural production of GLP-1 and improve the absorption of the diabetes medication exenatide. In tests on human and mouse cells, as well as in diabetic mice, the system boosted GLP-1 levels and improved blood sugar control and insulin resistance after both a single dose and five weeks of treatment. The mice also showed reduced obesity, fat, liver fat buildup, and inflammation. The system achieved 4% absorption of exenatide and worked as effectively as the standard injected version.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Gut, 2020 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 50 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.74 |
| NIH percentile | 82 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To fulfil an unmet therapeutic need for treating type 2 diabetes by developing an innovative oral drug delivery nanosystem increasing the production of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and the absorption of peptides into the circulation.
DESIGN: We developed a nanocarrier for the oral delivery of peptides using lipid-based nanocapsules. We encapsulated the GLP-1 analogue exenatide within nanocapsules and investigated in vitro in human L-cells (NCl-H716) and murine L-cells (GLUTag cells) the ability of the nanosystem to trigger GLP-1 secretion. The therapeutic relevance of the nanosystem in vivo was tested in high-fat diet (HFD)-induced diabetic mice following acute (one administration) or chronic treatment (5 weeks) in obese and diabetic mice.
RESULTS: We demonstrated that this innovative nanosystem triggers GLP-1 secretion in both human and murine cells as well as in vivo in mice. This strategy increases the endogenous secretion of GLP-1 and the oral bioavailability of the GLP-1 analogue exenatide (4% bioavailability with our nanosystem).The nanosystem synergizes its own biological effect with the encapsulated GLP-1 analogue leading to a marked improvement of glucose tolerance and insulin resistance (acute and chronic). The chronic treatment decreased diet-induced obesity, fat mass, hepatic steatosis, together with lower infiltration and recruitment of immune cell populations and inflammation.
CONCLUSION: We developed a novel nanosystem compatible with human use that synergizes its own biological effect with the effects of increasing the bioavailability of a GLP-1 analogue. The effects of the formulation were comparable to the results observed for the marketed subcutaneous formulation. This nanocarrier-based strategy represents a novel promising approach for oral peptide delivery in incretin-based diabetes treatment.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 31401561 ↗