Author:
Chou Danny Hung-Chieh,Webber Matthew J.,Tang Benjamin C.,Lin Amy B.,Thapa Lavanya S.,Deng David,Truong Jonathan V.,Cortinas Abel B.,Langer Robert,Anderson Daniel G.
Abstract
Since its discovery and isolation, exogenous insulin has dramatically changed the outlook for patients with diabetes. However, even when patients strictly follow an insulin regimen, serious complications can result as patients experience both hyperglycemic and hypoglycemic states. Several chemically or genetically modified insulins have been developed that tune the pharmacokinetics of insulin activity for personalized therapy. Here, we demonstrate a strategy for the chemical modification of insulin intended to promote both long-lasting and glucose-responsive activity through the incorporation of an aliphatic domain to facilitate hydrophobic interactions, as well as a phenylboronic acid for glucose sensing. These synthetic insulin derivatives enable rapid reversal of blood glucose in a diabetic mouse model following glucose challenge, with some derivatives responding to repeated glucose challenges over a 13-h period. The best-performing insulin derivative provides glucose control that is superior to native insulin, with responsiveness to glucose challenge improved over a clinically used long-acting insulin derivative. Moreover, continuous glucose monitoring reveals responsiveness matching that of a healthy pancreas. This synthetic approach to insulin modification could afford both long-term and glucose-mediated insulin activity, thereby reducing the number of administrations and improving the fidelity of glycemic control for insulin therapy. The described work is to our knowledge the first demonstration of a glucose-binding modified insulin molecule with glucose-responsive activity verified in vivo.
Funder
Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust
HHS | NIH | National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation International
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
197 articles.
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