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A spectroscopic and molecular dynamics study on the aggregation process of a long-acting lipidated therapeutic peptide: the case of semaglutide.

Soft Matter · 2020

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers studied how semaglutide, a drug used to treat type 2 diabetes, behaves in water at different concentrations. They found that at low concentrations (around 20 micromolar), semaglutide exists mostly as single molecules or pairs, but at higher concentrations, it starts forming larger clumps with a specific structure. Over time, these clumps develop into even bigger aggregates with a particular arrangement of the drug's molecules.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalSoft Matter, 2020
Citations24
Relative citation ratio1.35
NIH percentile61
Molecules semaglutide

Abstract

The aggregation properties of semaglutide, a lipidated peptide drug agonist of the Glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor recently approved for the treatment of type 2 diabetes, have been investigated by spectroscopic techniques (UV-Vis absorption, steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence, and electronic circular dichroism) and molecular dynamics simulations. We show that in the micromolar concentration region, in aqueous solution, semaglutide is present as monomeric and dimeric species, with a characteristic monomer-to-dimer transition occurring at around 20 μM. The lipid chain stabilizes a globular morphology of the monomer and dimer species, giving rise to a locally well-defined polar outer surface where the lipid and peptide portions are packed to each other. At very long times, these peptide clusters nucleate the growth of larger aggregates characterized by blue luminescence and a β-sheet arrangement of the peptide chains. The understanding of the oligomerization and aggregation potential of peptide candidates is key for the development of long acting and stable drugs.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 32780784 ↗

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