Biologic therapies for diabetes have advanced significantly through molecular engineering strategies that optimize therapeutic stability, pharmacokinetics, and delivery. This review presents an integrated overview of design principles used to develop insulin, glucagon, amylin analogs, and GLP-1 receptor agonists, highlighting their unique physicochemical challenges and therapeutic requirements. Structural modifications-including amino acid substitutions, peptide stapling, glycosylation, and PEGylation-are discussed for their roles in enhancing stability, reducing aggregation, and extending half-life. Strategies for tuning pharmacokinetics are examined, ranging from sequence-driven solubility modulation to formulation-based depot formation and vascular binding mechanisms. Various administration routes, including oral, inhaled, and intranasal delivery, are evaluated for their potential to improve adherence and more closely mimic endogenous hormone profiles. The review also addresses the development of combination therapies and multi-receptor agonists designed to synergize complementary hormonal pathways. Finally, recent progress in glucose-responsive systems is reviewed, emphasizing molecular and materials-based approaches that enable real-time, glucose-triggered therapeutic activation. Taken together, the evolution of diabetes therapeutics exemplifies the application of core molecular design concepts in biologic drug development. The strategies outlined herein not only address the complex demands of glycemic control but also provide a broadly applicable framework for engineering next-generation protein-based therapies for applications beyond diabetes.
DeWolf et al. (Sun,) studied this question.