CATALOG PEPTIDES

Exendin Peptides

Exendin-4 in the treatment of Type-2 diabetes and NAFLD

Exendin-4 (Exenatide), a 39-amino acid peptide originally isolated from the oral secretions of the lizard Heloderma suspectum, is an agonist of the glucagon-like-peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor.  Exendin-4 shares a 53% sequence homology with GLP-1. It induces insulin release of insulin after food intake, suppresses the release of glucagon, and slows down gastric emptying, thereby decreasing the rate at which food-derived glucose appears in the bloodstream.

Exendin-4 has a longer half-life than GLP-1 in the plasma, thus making it a more potent insulinotropic agent, and a better candidate for the treatment of type-2 diabetes mellitus. Because Exendin-4 also reduces the liver fat content, it may be beneficial in treating nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), a hepatic disease associated with insulin resistance.

Exendin-4 increases insulin sensitivity via a PI-3-kinase-dependent mechanism. In the human fetal pancreas, the proliferation and differentiation of endocrine precursor cells into insulin-producing ß-cells can be positively regulated by Exendin-4. Moreover, the peptide accelerates the functional maturation of fetal ß-cells as indicated by the stimulated insulin secretion in response to glucose.

 

References

  • Eng, J. et al. J. Biol. 265, 20259 (1990)
  • Movassat, J. et al. Clin. Endo. Met. 87, 4775 (2002)
  • Barragan, JM. et al. Regul. Pept. 67, 63 (1996)
  • Idris, I. et al. Biochem. Pharmacol. 63, 993 (2002)
  • Fehmann, HC. et al. Peptides 15, 453 (1994)
  • Ding et al. Hepathology 43(1), 173 (2006)
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