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The construction of long-acting exendin-4 analog and its hypoglycemic effect in diabetic mice.

Protein Expr Purif · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers created a modified version of the GLP-1 drug exendin-4 by attaching it to a protein that helps it stay in the body longer. In diabetic mice, this modified version lowered blood sugar similarly to the original drug but kept working for 8 to 10 hours instead of just 1 to 2 hours. The new version was produced with over 98% purity and did not interfere with how exendin-4 normally functions.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalProtein Expr Purif, 2024
Citations0
Relative citation ratio0.00
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Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Exendin-4 is a glucagon-like polypeptide-1 (GLP-1) analog derived from lizard venom, but its short half-life affects drug administration compliance. An anti-HSA nanobody with a smaller size to guide the peptide coupling to Human Serum Albumin(HSA) in vivo may be a feasible strategy for constructing inexpensive, long-acting exendin-4 analogs. For this purpose, a fusion protein (exendin-4-(G4S)3-sdAbHSA), in which a humanized anti-HSA nanobody to the C-terminal of exendin-4 through the (GlySer) flexible joint, was constructed. The target gene was designed according to the preferred codons and cloned into expression vector pET21b of Escherichia coli. The fusion protein could be efficiently expressed as a soluble protein, and purified to a purity over 98% by two steps of chromatography columns. In the streptozotocin-induced mouse diabetes model, the purified product had similar hypoglycemic activity as exendin-4, but dropped to the lowest value from 1 to 2 h to more than 8-10 h. The results show that this construction form does not interfere with the binding of exendin-4 to GLP-1 receptor, and can significantly prolong its half-life in vivo. This study has important reference value for constructing long-acting exendin-4 analogs and establishing efficient and green production process.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37730142 ↗