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A polyphenol-metal nanoparticle platform for tunable release of liraglutide to improve blood glycemic control and reduce cardiovascular complications in a mouse model of type II diabetes.

J Control Release · 2020

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers developed a new nanoparticle system to deliver the diabetes drug liraglutide over a longer period, reducing the need for frequent injections. In a 30-day study, mice given the nanoparticle formulation once every 5 days showed a 20% reduction in long-term blood sugar levels (HbA1c) and similar weight control compared to daily injections of the drug alone. The extended treatment also improved heart health by reducing fat buildup and oxidative stress in the heart tissue.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Control Release, 2020
Citations39
Relative citation ratio2.21
NIH percentile76
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction

Abstract

Liraglutide is a GLP-1 receptor agonist recently approved for Type-II diabetes (T2D) treatment with superior hypoglycemic effect while also improving cardiovascular function for the patients. However, its application has been limited by its short half-life (~13 h), which requires daily injections to maintain effective drug concentrations in blood, thus increasing the risk of poor patient compliance and complications. In this study, we developed a ternary liraglutide/tannic acid (TA)/Al nanoparticle system based on hydrogen bond formation between liraglutide and TA and stabilized by complex coordination interaction between TA and Al. This ternary nanoparticle formulation offers sustained release of liraglutide for >8 days by optimizing the concentration of TA during nanoparticle assembly. A flash nanocomplexation (FNC) process was adopted to confer homogeneous mixing of the three components and control the assembly kinetics, thus enabling efficient encapsulation, a tunable drug release profile, improved nanoparticle size uniformity, and a high degree of colloidal stability. Upon a single intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration, the optimized formulation effectively lowered the high blood glucose level in a T2D db/db mice model to the normal range (8-10 mmol/L) within 6 h, maintained it for 60 more hours, and kept it lower than the original level for >6 days. In a 30-day treatment study, the nanoparticle formulation with a dosage frequency of once every 5 days exhibited similar or better control of blood sugar level (20% reduction in HbA1c) and weight control than daily injection of free liraglutide at the same treatment dose. The extended glycemic control led to distinctive improvements on reducing cardiomyopathy, including inhibition in lipo-toxicity by decreasing 40% of triglyceride, 30% of diacylglycerol and 50% of PKC level in the heart, as well as ameliorating oxidative stress and cell apoptosis activities through positive regulation on superoxidase, malondialdehyde, caspase-3 and Bax. This nanoparticle system demonstrates improved therapeutic potential owing to its long-acting glycemic control with improved cardiovascular function and reduced tissue toxicity in multiple organs.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 31838207 ↗

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