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Enhanced disulphide bond stability contributes to the once-weekly profile of insulin icodec

František Hubálek, Christian N. Cramer, Hans Helleberg, Eva Johansson, Erica Nishimura, Gerd Schluckebier, Dorte B. Steensgaard, Jeppe Sturis, Thomas Kjeldsen

2024Nature Communications13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Insulin icodec is a once-weekly insulin analogue that has a long half-life of approximately 7 days, making it suitable for once weekly dosing. The Insulin icodec molecule was developed based on the hypothesis that lowering insulin receptor affinity and introducing a strong albumin-binding moiety would result in a long insulin half-life, provided that non-receptor-mediated clearance is diminished. Here, we report an insulin clearance mechanism, resulting in the splitting of insulin molecules into its A-chain and B-chain by a thiol-disulphide exchange reaction. Even though the substitutions in insulin icodec significantly stabilise insulin against such degradation, some free B-chain is observed in plasma samples from minipigs and people with type 2 diabetes. In summary, we identify thiol-disulphide exchange reactions to be an important insulin clearance mechanism and find that stabilising insulin icodec towards this reaction significantly contributes to its long pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic profile.

Topics & Concepts

InsulinInsulin receptorChemistryMoietyInsulin analogEndocrinologyPharmacodynamicsInternal medicinePharmacokineticsHuman insulinDiabetes mellitusThiolAlbuminInsulin receptor substrateBiochemistryMedicineStereochemistryInsulin resistanceReceptor Mechanisms and SignalingPharmacogenetics and Drug MetabolismProtein Interaction Studies and Fluorescence Analysis
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