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Lymphatic uptake of the lipidated and non-lipidated GLP-1 agonists liraglutide and exenatide is similar in rats.

Eur J Pharm Biopharm · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on rats, two GLP-1 drugs—liraglutide (lipidated) and exenatide (non-lipidated)—were compared after injection under the skin. Liraglutide stayed in the blood longer (9.1 hours vs. 1 hour) and had lower overall absorption (~10% vs. ~100%) than exenatide. Both drugs showed minimal movement into the lymphatic system (<0.5% of the dose), though some early traces were found in lymph fluid.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalEur J Pharm Biopharm, 2024
Citations8
Relative citation ratio1.96
NIH percentile73
Molecules liraglutide, exenatide

Abstract

Peptides, despite their therapeutic potential, face challenges with undesirable pharmacokinetic (PK) properties and biodistribution, including poor oral absorption and cellular uptake, and short plasma elimination half-lives. Lipidation of peptides is a common strategy to improve their physicochemical and PK properties, making them viable drug candidates. For example, the plasma half-life of peptides has been extended via conjugation to lipids that are proposed to promote binding to serum albumin and thus protect against rapid clearance. Recent work has shown that lipid conjugation to oligodeoxynucleotides, polymers and small molecule drugs results in association not only with albumin, but also with lipoproteins, resulting in half-life prolongation and transport from administration sites via the lymphatics. Enhancing delivery into the lymph increases the efficacy of vaccines and therapeutics with lymphatic targets such as immunotherapies. In this study, the plasma PK, lymphatic uptake, and bioavailability of the glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist peptides, liraglutide (lipidated) and exenatide (non-lipidated), were investigated following subcutaneous (SC) administration to rats. As expected, liraglutide displayed an apparent prolonged plasma half-life (9.1 versus 1 h), delayed peak plasma concentrations and lower bioavailability (∼10 % versus ∼100 %) compared to exenatide after SC administration. The lymphatic uptake of both peptides was relatively low (<0.5 % of the dose) although lymph to plasma concentration ratios were greater than one for several early timepoints suggesting some direct uptake into lymph. The low lymphatic uptake may be due to the nature of the conjugated lipid (a single-chain C16 palmitic acid in liraglutide) but suggests that other peptides with similar lipid conjugations may also have relatively modest lymphatic uptake. If delivery to the lymph is desired, conjugation to more lipophilic moieties with higher albumin and/or lipoprotein binding efficiencies, such as diacylglycerols, may be appropriate.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 38789061 ↗

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