Pharmaceutics (Dec 2021)

Amino Acid Nanofibers Improve Glycemia and Confer Cognitive Therapeutic Efficacy to Bound Insulin

  • Aejin Lee,
  • McKensie L. Mason,
  • Tao Lin,
  • Shashi Bhushan Kumar,
  • Devan Kowdley,
  • Jacob H. Leung,
  • Danah Muhanna,
  • Yuan Sun,
  • Joana Ortega-Anaya,
  • Lianbo Yu,
  • Julie Fitzgerald,
  • A. Courtney DeVries,
  • Randy J. Nelson,
  • Zachary M. Weil,
  • Rafael Jiménez-Flores,
  • Jon R. Parquette,
  • Ouliana Ziouzenkova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14010081
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. 81

Abstract

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Diabetes poses a high risk for debilitating complications in neural tissues, regulating glucose uptake through insulin-dependent and predominantly insulin-independent pathways. Supramolecular nanostructures provide a flexible strategy for combinatorial regulation of glycemia. Here, we compare the effects of free insulin to insulin bound to positively charged nanofibers comprised of self-assembling amino acid compounds (AACs) with an antioxidant-modified side chain moiety (AAC2) in both in vitro and in vivo models of type 1 diabetes. Free AAC2, free human insulin (hINS) and AAC2-bound-human insulin (AAC2-hINS) were tested in streptozotocin (STZ)-induced mouse model of type 1 diabetes. AAC2-hINS acted as a complex and exhibited different properties compared to free AAC2 or hINS. Mice treated with the AAC2-hINS complex were devoid of hypoglycemic episodes, had improved levels of insulin in circulation and in the brain, and increased expression of neurotransmitter taurine transporter, Slc6a6. Consequently, treatment with AAC2-hINS markedly advanced both physical and cognitive performance in mice with STZ-induced and genetic type 1 diabetes compared to treatments with free AAC2 or hINS. This study demonstrates that the flexible nanofiber AAC2 can serve as a therapeutic platform for the combinatorial treatment of diabetes and its complications.

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