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ForumsPharmacology & MechanismsSemaglutide albumin binding and the C-18 fatty acid linker — 12 month update

Semaglutide albumin binding and the C-18 fatty acid linker — 12 month update

LindaRN_retired Sun, Nov 12, 2023 at 11:54 AM 31 replies 2,291 viewsPage 1 of 7
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LindaRN_retired
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Nov 12, 2023 at 1:19 PM#1
Let's talk about what makes semaglutide truly remarkable from a PK perspective — the C-18 fatty diacid modification that enables once-weekly dosing. This is one of the most elegant pieces of medicinal chemistry in modern drug development. The basic structure: Semaglutide = GLP-1(7-37) with: - Aib at position 2 (DPP-4 resistance) - Arg → Aib substitution at position 34 - Lys26 side chain acylated with a C-18 fatty diacid via a mini-PEG linker (OEG-OEG spacer) The fatty acid moiety (octadecandioic acid) binds non-covalently to serum albumin with a Kd of approximately 2-5 μM, creating a massive circulating reservoir of albumin-bound drug. > "The C-18 fatty diacid modification of semaglutide confers >99% albumin binding in plasma, resulting in a mean terminal half-life of 165 hours (approximately 7 days) compared to 13 hours for liraglutide (C-16 fatty acid, ~98% albumin bound)." > — Lau et al., *Journal of Medicinal Chemistry*, 2015; 58(18):7370–7380 The key insight: a seemingly small change from C-16 (liraglutide) to C-18 (semaglutide) with optimized linker chemistry produced a 13-fold increase in half-life. Why?
27 3DataDave, Dr.GutHealth, amsterdam_pete and 24 others
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kim_atl_prep
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Nov 12, 2023 at 1:36 PM#2
The half-life extension from liraglutide → semaglutide is a masterclass in PK optimization. Let me break down the contributing factors: 1. Albumin binding affinity: The C-18 diacid binds albumin ~3-fold tighter than the C-16 monoacid of liraglutide. More importantly, the diacid has TWO carboxylate groups that form ionic interactions with positively charged residues in albumin's fatty acid binding sites (Sudlow sites I and II). The monoacid only has one. 2. The OEG-OEG spacer: This is the unsung hero. The spacer (two 8-atom polyethylene glycol units) accomplishes several things: - Provides sufficient distance between the peptide and fatty acid to allow simultaneous albumin binding and receptor engagement - Reduces steric clash between albumin and GLP-1R - Adds hydrophilicity to offset the increased lipophilicity of C-18 vs C-16 > "Systematic optimization of the linker length between the GLP-1 analog backbone and the fatty acid revealed that linkers of 13-17 atoms provided optimal balance between albumin binding affinity (driving half-life) and GLP-1R binding potency (driving efficacy)." > — Knudsen et al., *Journal of Medicinal Chemistry*, 2000; 43(9):1664–1669 3. Reduced renal clearance: The albumin-bound complex (~67 kDa effective size) is too large for glomerular filtration. Free semaglutide (~4.1 kDa) would be rapidly filtered, but with >99% bound, the free fraction is tiny.
Last edited: Nov 12, 2023 at 7:36 PM
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Dr.NutriCornell
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Nov 12, 2023 at 1:53 PM#3
Building on this — the albumin binding also has important implications for drug distribution and tissue access. Distribution volume: Semaglutide Vd/F is approximately 12.5 L — very close to plasma volume (~3L) plus interstitial fluid (~10L). This tells us the drug distributes primarily in the extracellular space and does NOT significantly penetrate into cells or fat depots. The drug essentially travels WITH albumin. Tissue access paradox: If semaglutide is >99% albumin-bound, how does it reach its targets? The answer involves the dynamic equilibrium between bound and free drug: albumin·semaglutide ⇌ albumin + semaglutide(free) The free fraction (~0.5-1%) is in constant equilibrium. As free drug binds to GLP-1R and is internalized, more dissociates from albumin. The albumin acts as a sustained-release reservoir. > "Despite >99% plasma protein binding, semaglutide achieved cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of approximately 0.1-0.3% of plasma levels in cynomolgus monkeys, sufficient for hypothalamic GLP-1R engagement given the subnanomolar receptor affinity." > — Gabery et al., *JCI Insight*, 2020; 5(6):e133429 Critical point: The free fraction, not total drug concentration, determines pharmacological activity. This is why the PK/PD relationship for semaglutide shows a relatively flat exposure-response curve above ~0.5 mg — you've already saturated the receptors with even the small free fraction.
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hank_denver
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Nov 12, 2023 at 2:10 PM#4
Excellent point about CSF penetration. This leads to one of the big debates in the field — does semaglutide cross the blood-brain barrier via free drug diffusion, or is there active transport? The evidence suggests it's primarily circumventricular organ access rather than BBB transcytosis: The area postrema and median eminence lack a traditional BBB, allowing direct access for circulating peptides. Semaglutide likely reaches NTS neurons (area postrema) and ARC neurons (median eminence) through these fenestrated capillary beds, not by crossing intact BBB. > "Fluorescently-labeled semaglutide accumulated preferentially in circumventricular organs (area postrema, median eminence, subfornical organ) and adjacent hypothalamic nuclei within 4 hours of subcutaneous injection, with minimal penetration into brain regions protected by intact BBB." > — Secher et al., *Journal of Clinical Investigation*, 2014; 124(10):4473–4488 This has implications for the oral formulation (Rybelsus) — oral semaglutide achieves lower absolute bioavailability (~1% with SNAC enhancer) and lower total plasma concentrations. If CNS access is proportional to free plasma concentration, oral semaglutide may have proportionally less central appetite suppression per unit of glycemic effect.
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carlos_SATX
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Nov 12, 2023 at 2:27 PM#5
Since you mentioned SNAC (sodium N-[8-(2-hydroxybenzoyl)amino]caprylate), let me add some detail on the oral formulation pharmacology because it's directly related to the albumin binding discussion. Oral semaglutide (Rybelsus) PK: - SNAC creates a transient local pH increase in the gastric mucosa - This promotes transcellular absorption of semaglutide across gastric epithelium - Absolute bioavailability: ~0.4-1% (highly variable, CV ~80%) - Tmax: 1 hour (fasted state) - Once absorbed, the albumin binding and terminal t½ are identical to subcutaneous The clinical challenge: with <1% bioavailability, the 14 mg oral dose delivers roughly 0.056-0.14 mg systemically. Compare this to 0.5-2.4 mg delivered subcutaneously. Yet the clinical efficacy at 14 mg oral approaches that of 0.5 mg SC. > "Oral semaglutide 14 mg achieved steady-state exposure (AUC) approximately equivalent to subcutaneous semaglutide 0.5 mg, with similar HbA1c reductions (−1.3% vs −1.4%) in the PIONEER/SUSTAIN cross-trial comparison." > — Bucheit et al., *Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism*, 2020; 22(Suppl 1):45–59 The high variability in oral absorption is the main PK limitation — and it's why the fasting requirement (30 min before food, ≤4 oz water) is so strict. Food in the stomach destroys absorption completely by diluting the SNAC concentration below its critical micelle-like threshold.
Last edited: Nov 12, 2023 at 4:27 PM
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