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FRAP analysis of peptide diffusion in extracellular matrix mimetic hydrogels as an in vitro model for subcutaneous injection.

Int J Pharm · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers tested how well different substances, including the GLP-1 drug exenatide, move through gel models meant to mimic human tissue after a subcutaneous injection. They found that exenatide sometimes clumps together, making it harder to spread, while other substances moved freely in some gels. The study suggests this method could help understand how drugs are absorbed after being injected under the skin.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalInt J Pharm, 2024
Citations5
Relative citation ratio1.68
NIH percentile68
Molecules

Abstract

Subcutaneous (SC) injection is a common route of administration for drug compounds with poor oral bioavailability. However, bioavailability is often variable and incomplete, and there is as yet no standard accepted medium for simulation of the human SC environment. In this work we evaluate a FRAP based method for quantitative determination of local self-diffusion coefficients within extracellular matrix (ECM) mimetic hydrogels, potentially useful as in vitro models for drug transport in the ECM after SC injection. Gels were made consisting of either agarose, cross-linked collagen (COL) and hyaluronic acid (HA) or cross-linked HA. The diffusivities of uncharged FITC-dextran (FD4), the highly charged poly-lysine (PLK20) and poly-glutamic acid (PLE20) as well as the GLP-1 analogue exenatide were determined within the gels using FRAP. The diffusion coefficients in uncharged agarose gels were in the range of free diffusion in PBS. The diffusivity of cationic PLK20 in gels containing anionic HA was substantially decreased due to strong electrostatic interactions. Peptide aggregation could be observed as immobile fractions in experiments with exenatide. We conclude that the FRAP method provides useful information of peptides' interactions and transport properties in hydrogel networks, giving insight into the mechanisms affecting absorption of drug compounds after subcutaneous injection.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39179009 ↗