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Folic acid-modified reverse micelle-lipid nanocapsules overcome intestinal barriers and improve the oral delivery of peptides.

Drug Deliv · 2023

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers developed a new way to deliver the diabetes drug exenatide using tiny capsules called FA-RM-LNC. In lab tests, these capsules improved the drug's absorption in the small intestine and increased its effectiveness in lowering blood sugar in diabetic mice. When given to rats, the capsules achieved a relative bioavailability of 7.5%, meaning they delivered more of the drug compared to standard methods.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDrug Deliv, 2023
Citations10
Relative citation ratio1.48
NIH percentile64
Molecules

Abstract

The oral absorption of exenatide, a type 2 diabetes medication, can be increased by employing lipid nanocapsules (LNC). To increase mucus permeability and exenatide intestinal absorption, reverse micelle lipid nanocapsules (RM-LNC) were prepared and their surface was modified with DSPE-PEG-FA. The RM-LNC with surface modification of DSPE-PEG-FA (FA-RM-LNC) were able to target enterocytes and reduce mucus aggregation in the intestine. Furthermore, absorption at different intestinal sites and flip-flop intestinal loop experiments revealed that LNCs with surface modification significantly increased their absorption efficiency in the small intestine. FA-RM-LNC delivers more drugs into Caco-2 cells caveolin-, macrophagocytosis-, and lipid raft-mediated endocytosis. Additionally, the enhanced transport capacity of FA-RM-LNC was observed in a study of monolayer transport in Caco-2 cells. The oral administration of exenatide FA-RM-LNC resulted in a prolonged duration of hypoglycemia in diabetic mice and a relative bioavailability (BR) of up to 7.5% in rats. In conclusion, FA-RM-LNC can target enterocytes and has promising potential as a nanocarrier for the oral delivery of peptides.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 36855953 ↗