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The limitation of lipidation: Conversion of semaglutide from once-weekly to once-monthly dosing.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers tested a once-monthly version of the GLP-1 drug semaglutide by attaching it to tiny hydrogel beads designed to release the drug slowly over about a month. In mice, a single dose led to a 20% reduction in body weight over 30 days, similar to the effect of twice-daily semaglutide, and the drug stayed active in the body for about 36 days. Simulations suggest this method could allow humans to take semaglutide just once a month while maintaining effective drug levels, potentially with fewer side effects or the option for higher doses.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalProc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 2024
Citations6
Relative citation ratio0.93
NIH percentile48
Molecules semaglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity

Abstract

The objective of this work was to develop a long-acting form of the lipidated peptide semaglutide that can be administered to humans once-monthly. Semaglutide was attached to hydrogel microspheres by a cleavable linker with an expected in vivo release half-life of about 1 mo. After a single subcutaneous dose, the pharmacokinetic parameters of released semaglutide and bodyweight loss were determined in mice, and results were used to estimate the dosing and pharmacokinetics of the released semaglutide in humans. The in vivo half-life of released semaglutide was ~36 d, and a single dose in diet-induced obese mice resulted in a lean-sparing body weight loss of 20% over 1 mo, statistically the same as semaglutide dosed twice daily. Simulations indicated the microsphere-semaglutide would permit once-monthly administration in humans; moreover, it could maintain the therapeutic minimum concentration (C) of once-weekly semaglutide with only 75% of the once-weekly maximum concentration (C), a feature that could reduce adverse side effects or allow higher dosing. The same approach should enable the conversion of other lipidated peptides from once-weekly to once-monthly administration.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39531496 ↗

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