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A co-formulation of supramolecularly stabilized insulin and pramlintide enhances mealtime glucagon suppression in diabetic pigs.

Caitlin L MaikawaAnton A A SmithLei ZouGillie A RothEmily C GaleLyndsay M StapletonSam W BakerJoseph L MannAnthony C YuSantiago CorreaAbigail K GrosskopfCeline S LiongCatherine M KasseDoreen ChanMegan TroxellDavid M MaahsBruce A BuckinghamMatthew J WebberEric A Appel
Published in: Nature biomedical engineering (2020)
Treatment of patients with diabetes with insulin and pramlintide (an amylin analogue) is more effective than treatment with insulin only. However, because mixtures of insulin and pramlintide are unstable and have to be injected separately, amylin analogues are only used by 1.5% of people with diabetes needing rapid-acting insulin. Here, we show that the supramolecular modification of insulin and pramlintide with cucurbit[7]uril-conjugated polyethylene glycol improves the pharmacokinetics of the dual-hormone therapy and enhances postprandial glucagon suppression in diabetic pigs. The co-formulation is stable for over 100 h at 37 °C under continuous agitation, whereas commercial formulations of insulin analogues aggregate after 10 h under similar conditions. In diabetic rats, the administration of the stabilized co-formulation increased the area-of-overlap ratio of the pharmacokinetic curves of pramlintide and insulin from 0.4 ± 0.2 to 0.7 ± 0.1 (mean ± s.d.) for the separate administration of the hormones. The co-administration of supramolecularly stabilized insulin and pramlintide better mimics the endogenous kinetics of co-secreted insulin and amylin, and holds promise as a dual-hormone replacement therapy.
Keyphrases
  • type diabetes
  • glycemic control
  • replacement therapy
  • cardiovascular disease
  • machine learning
  • blood glucose
  • diabetic rats
  • adipose tissue
  • molecular docking
  • blood pressure
  • ionic liquid
  • sensitive detection