胰岛素
体内
胰岛素受体
人胰岛素
体外
生物
糖尿病
受体
细胞生物学
化学
生物化学
药理学
内分泌学
胰岛素抵抗
遗传学
作者
Xiaochun Xiong,John G. Menting,Maria M. Disotuar,Nicholas A. Smith,Carlie Delaine,Gabrielle Ghabash,Rahul Agrawal,Xiaomin Wang,He Xiao,Simon J. Fisher,Christopher A. MacRaild,Raymond S. Norton,Joanna Gajewiak,Briony E. Forbes,Brian J. Smith,Helena Safavi-Hemami,Baldomero M. Olivera,Michael C. Lawrence,Danny Hung‐Chieh Chou
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41594-020-0430-8
摘要
Human insulin and its current therapeutic analogs all show propensity, albeit varyingly, to self-associate into dimers and hexamers, which delays their onset of action and makes blood glucose management difficult for people with diabetes. Recently, we described a monomeric, insulin-like peptide in cone-snail venom with moderate human insulin-like bioactivity. Here, with insights from structural biology studies, we report the development of mini-Ins—a human des-octapeptide insulin analog—as a structurally minimal, full-potency insulin. Mini-Ins is monomeric and, despite the lack of the canonical B-chain C-terminal octapeptide, has similar receptor binding affinity to human insulin. Four mutations compensate for the lack of contacts normally made by the octapeptide. Mini-Ins also has similar in vitro insulin signaling and in vivo bioactivities to human insulin. The full bioactivity of mini-Ins demonstrates the dispensability of the PheB24–PheB25–TyrB26 aromatic triplet and opens a new direction for therapeutic insulin development. Insights from structural biology lead to the development of mini-Ins—a human des-octapeptide insulin analog that is monomeric and has receptor binding affinity and in vitro and in vivo activities comparable to those of human insulin.
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