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A structurally minimized yet fully active insulin based on cone-snail venom insulin principles.

Xiaochun XiongJohn G MentingMaria M DisotuarNicholas A SmithCarlie A DelaineGabrielle GhabashRahul AgrawalXiaomin WangXiao HeSimon J FisherChristopher A MacRaildRaymond S NortonJoanna GajewiakBriony E ForbesBrian J SmithHelena Safavi-HemamiBaldomero OliveraMichael C LawrenceDanny Hung-Chieh Chou
Published in: Nature structural & molecular biology (2020)
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.
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