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Genetic engineering of novel super long-acting Exendin-4 chimeric protein for effective treatment of metabolic and cognitive complications of obesity.

Biomaterials · 2020

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers created a modified version of the diabetes drug exendin-4 (EX) by fusing it with albumin-binding and recycling proteins to extend its time in the body. In mice, this new version (EX-ABD-AFF) lasted 241 times longer than the original drug and controlled blood sugar for over 12 days while also reducing body weight. The modified drug also improved obesity-related issues like high blood sugar, high cholesterol, and liver fat buildup, and even helped with brain function problems linked to obesity.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalBiomaterials, 2020
Citations12
Relative citation ratio0.65
NIH percentile36
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity, Alzheimers

Abstract

A common bottleneck challenge for many therapeutic proteins lies in their short plasma half-lives, which often makes the treatment far less compliant or even disables achieving sufficient therapeutic efficacy. To address this problem, we introduce a novel drug delivery strategy based on the genetic fusion of an albumin binding domain (ABD) and an anti-neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) affibody (AFF) to therapeutic proteins. This ABD-AFF fusion strategy can provide a synergistic effect on extending the plasma residence time by, on one hand, preventing the rapid glomerular filtration via ABD-mediated albumin binding and, on the other hand, increasing the efficiency of FcRn-mediated recycling by AFF-mediated high-affinity binding to the FcRn. In this research, we explored the feasibility of applying the ABD-AFF fusion strategy to exendin-4 (EX), a clinically available anti-diabetic peptide possessing a short plasma half-life. The EX-ABD-AFF produced from the E. coli displayed a remarkably (241-fold) longer plasma half-life than the SUMO tagged-EX (SUMO-EX) (0.7 h) in mice. Furthermore, in high-fat diet (HFD)-fed obese mice model, the EX-ABD-AFF could provide significant hypoglycemic effects for over 12 days, accompanied by a reduction of body weight. In the long-term study, the EX-ABD-AFF could significantly reverse the obesity-related metabolic complications (hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia, and hepatic steatosis) and, moreover, improve cognitive deficits. Overall, this study demonstrated that the ABD-AFF fusion could be an effective strategy to greatly increase the plasma half-lives of therapeutic proteins and thus markedly improve their druggability.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 32736262 ↗