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Signaling Modulation via Minimal C-Terminal Modifications of Apelin-13.

Léa ThérouxRobin Van Den HauweKien TrânJustin FournierMichael DesgagnéNathan MenebooAlexis LavalléeUlrike FröhlichJérôme CôtéCharlie HollandersJean-Michel LongpréAlexandre MurzaEric MarsaultPhilippe SarretPierre-Luc BoudreaultSteven Ballet
Published in: ACS pharmacology & translational science (2023)
Apelin is an endogenous peptide that is involved in many diseases such as cardiovascular diseases, obesity, and cancer, which has made it an attractive target for drug discovery. Herein, we explore the penultimate and final sequence positions of [Pyr 1 ]-apelin-13 (Ape13) via C-terminal N α -alkylated amide bonds and the introduction of positive charges, potentially targeting the allosteric sodium pocket, by assessing the binding affinity and signaling profiles at the apelin receptor (APJ). Synthetic analogues modified within this segment of Ape13 showed high affinity ( K i 0.12-0.17 nM vs Ape13 K i 0.7 nM), potent Gα i1 activation (EC 50 Gα i1 0.4-0.9 nM vs Ape13 EC 50 1.1 nM), partial agonist behavior disfavoring β-arrestin 2 recruitment for positively charged ligands (e.g., 49 ( SBL-AP-058 ), EC 50 β-arr2 275 nM, E max 54%) and high plasma stability for N -alkyl ligands ( t 1/2 > 7 h vs Ape13 t 1/2 0.5 h). Combining the benefits of the N α -alkylated amide bond with the guanidino substitution in a constrained ligand led to 63 ( SBL-AP-049 ), which displayed increased plasma stability ( t 1/2 5.3 h) and strong reduction of β-arrestin 2 signaling with partial maximal efficacy (EC 50 β-arr 864 nM, E max 48%), significantly reducing the hypotensive effect in vivo .
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