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 2026-05-28Researchers 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.
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| Journal | Biomaterials, 2020 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 12 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.65 |
| NIH percentile | 36 |
| 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 ↗