Improvement of intestinal absorption of peptide drugs by glycosylation: transport of tetrapeptide by the sodium ion-dependent D-glucose transporter.

Journal: Journal Of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Published:
Abstract

A tetrapeptide (Gly-Gly-Tyr-Arg, GGYR), which is not transported by di- or tripeptide transporters, was glycosylated with p-(succinylamido)phenyl alpha- or beta-D-glucopyranoside (alpha,beta-SAPG) to investigate whether these glycosylated molecules are transported by the Na+-dependent D-glucose transporter. Their uptake into brush border membrane vesicles (BBMVs) and transport through the intestinal membrane were examined using the rapid filtration technique and the everted sac method. It was observed that glycosylation at the alpha-amino position of GGYR increased resistance to aminopeptidase activity and inhibited its degradation. When alpha- and beta-SAPG-GGYR were incubated with BBMVs, overshoot uptake was observed about 2 min after the start of incubation in the presence of an inward Na+ gradient. This uptake remained unaffected by the addition of GGYR while it was significantly inhibited when Na+ was replaced with K+ or alpha- and beta-SAPG-GGYR were incubated with BBMVs at 4 degrees C. Uptake was also markedly inhibited either with 1 mM phloridzin or 10 mM D-glucose. These findings suggested that the Na+-dependent glucose transporter (SGLT-1) played an important role in the uptake of both alpha- and beta-SAPG-GGYR into BBMVs. A comparison of alpha- with beta-SAPG-GGYR revealed that the amount of beta-SAPG-GGYR taken up was greater than that of alpha-SAPG-GGYR. From the everted sac method data, it was shown that the elimination clearance from the mucosal side, CLel, and permeation clearance to the serosal side, CLp, were 15.82+/-6.83 and 0.83+/-0.06 microL/min/cm for alpha-SAPG-GGYR and 44.52+/-3.61 and 3.50+/-0.81 microL/min/cm for beta-SAPG-GGYR, respectively, and that alpha-SAPG-GGYR was more resistant to enzymatic degradation than beta-SAPG-GGYR. Permeation of both alpha- and beta-SAPG-GGYR was inhibited in the presence of D-glucose and in the absence of a Na+ gradient, suggesting that both alpha- and beta-SAPG-GGYR were transported by the Na+-dependent D-glucose transporter. The permeation clearance transported by the Na+-dependent D-glucose transporter, (CLp)Na+, of beta-SAPG-GGYR was about 5 times greater than that for alpha-SAPG-GGYR. This result may be ascribable to the fact that the beta-form of glucose has higher affinity to SGLT-1 than the alpha-form. The results of the present study encourage further investigations on improvements in intestinal absorption of peptide drugs by glycosylation.

Authors
M Nomoto, K Yamada, M Haga, M Hayashi