PurposeBasal insulins with improved kinetic properties can potentially be produced using acylation by fatty acids that enable soluble, high-molecular weight complexes to form post-injection. A series of insulins, acylated at B29 with fatty acids via glutamic acid spacers, were examined to deduce the structural requirements.MethodsSelf-association, molecular masses and hexameric conformations of the insulins were studied using size exclusion chromatography monitored by UV or multi-angle light scattering and dynamic light scattering, and circular dichroism spectroscopy (CDS) in environments (changing phenol and zinc concentration) simulating a pharmaceutical formulation and changes following subcutaneous injection.ResultsWith depletion of phenol, insulin degludec and another fatty diacid–insulin analogue formed high molecular mass filament-like complexes, which disintegrated with depletion of zinc. CDS showed these analogues adopting stable T3R3 conformation in presence of phenol and zinc, changing to T6 with depletion of phenol. These findings suggest insulin degludec is dihexameric in pharmaceutical formulation becoming multihexameric after injection. The analogues showed weak dimeric association, indicating rapid release of monomers following hexamer disassembly.ConclusionsInsulins can be engineered that remain soluble but become highly self-associated after injection, slowly releasing monomers; this is critically dependent on the acylation moiety. One such analogue, insulin degludec, has therapeutic potential.
Here, we describe the molecular engineering of insulin icodec to achieve a plasma half-life of 196 h in humans, suitable for once-weekly subcutaneously administration. Insulin icodec is based on re-engineering of the ultra-long oral basal insulin OI338 with a plasma half-life of 70 h in humans. This systematic re-engineering was accomplished by (1) further increasing the albumin binding by changing the fatty diacid from a 1,18-octadecanedioic acid (C18) to a 1,20-icosanedioic acid (C20) and (2) further reducing the insulin receptor affinity by the B16Tyr → His substitution. Insulin icodec was selected by screening for long intravenous plasma half-life in dogs while ensuring glucose-lowering potency following subcutaneous administration in rats. The ensuing structure–activity relationship resulted in insulin icodec. In phase-2 clinical trial, once-weekly insulin icodec provided safe and efficacious glycemic control comparable to once-daily insulin glargine in type 2 diabetes patients. The structure–activity relationship study leading to insulin icodec is presented here.
Insulin is thought to elicit its effects by crosslinking the two extracellular ␣-subunits of its receptor, thereby inducing a conformational change in the receptor, which activates the intracellular tyrosine kinase signaling cascade. Previously we identified a series of peptides binding to two discrete hotspots on the insulin receptor. Here we show that covalent linkage of such peptides into homodimers or heterodimers results in insulin agonists or antagonists, depending on how the peptides are linked. An optimized agonist has been shown, both in vitro and in vivo, to have a potency close to that of insulin itself. The ability to construct such peptide derivatives may offer a path for developing agonists or antagonists for treatment of a wide variety of diseases.I nsulin is one of the most studied peptide hormones because of its importance in maintaining glucose homeostasis. This 51-aa hormone is very well characterized with regard to its structure, both in crystal form and in solution. The insulin receptor (IR) is a transmembrane ␣ 2  2 glycoprotein whose intracellular tyrosine kinase domain is activated by binding of insulin, leading to a cascade of intracellular signaling events. The kinase domain of the IR (1) and an extracellular fragment of the related receptor for insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-IR; ref. 2) have been crystallized, but the structure of the insulin binding domain of the IR is not known, and the mechanism for the transmission of a signal through its transmembrane domain is not well understood. A model for the binding and activation has been proposed in which insulin uses two different sites on its surface to crosslink the two ␣-subunits of the IR, thus inducing a conformational change that activates the receptor (refs. 3 and 4; Fig. 1).In a previous report (5), we panned random, highly diverse peptide display libraries against the IR. By using this approach, we identified a large number of peptides binding to the IR and competing for insulin binding with micromolar or submicromolar affinity, although these peptides had no sequence homology with insulin. These peptides bound to two discrete hotspots on the receptor (designated site 1 and site 2), and these hotspots appeared to correspond to the two contact sites involved in insulin binding predicted by the crosslinking model (ref. 3 and J.B., unpublished results). At least two different sequence motifs were found for site 1 peptides, and some of these were full agonists but of low affinity. Other site 1 peptides were antagonists, whereas site 2 peptides were either antagonists or inactive. The mechanism behind the agonism of the site 1 peptides is not known, but it has been speculated that site 1 binding may be important for receptor activation, whereas the role of the site 2 interaction may be more related to affinity and selectivity. In addition to these two families of peptides, a third group was identified, but no further work has been done on this group. In the present work, we have used site 1 and site 2 peptides as building blocks ...
Ethynylation of various tryptophan-containing peptides and a single model protein was achieved using Waser's reagent, 1-[(triisopropylsilyl)ethynyl]-1,2-benziodoxol-3(1 H)-one (TIPS-EBX), under gold(I) catalysis. It was demonstrated by NMR that the ethynylation occurred selectively at the C2-position of the indole ring of tryptophan. Further, MS/MS showed that the tryptophan residues could be modified selectively with ethynyl functionalities even when the tryptophan was present as a part of the protein. Finally, the terminal alkyne was used to label a model peptide with a fluorophore by means of copper-catalyzed click chemistry.
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