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Preparation of Selenoinsulin as a Long-Lasting Insulin Analogue.

Kenta AraiToshiki TakeiMasaki OkumuraSatoshi WatanabeYuta AmagaiYuya AsahinaLuis MoroderHironobu HojoKenji InabaMichio Iwaoka
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2017)
Synthetic insulin analogues with a long lifetime are current drug targets for the therapy of diabetic patients. The replacement of the interchain disulfide with a diselenide bridge, which is more resistant to reduction and internal bond rotation, can enhance the lifetime of insulin in the presence of the insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) without impairing the hormonal function. The [C7UA ,C7UB ] variant of bovine pancreatic insulin (BPIns) was successfully prepared by using two selenocysteine peptides (i.e., the C7U analogues of A- and B-chains, respectively). In a buffer solution at pH 10 they spontaneously assembled under thermodynamic control to the correct insulin fold. The selenoinsulin (Se-Ins) exhibited a bioactivity comparable to that of BPIns. Interestingly, degradation of Se-Ins with IDE was significantly decelerated (τ1/2 ≈8 h vs. ≈1 h for BPIns). The lifetime enhancement could be due to both the intrinsic stability of the diselenide bond and local conformational changes induced by the substitution.
Keyphrases
  • type diabetes
  • glycemic control
  • molecular docking
  • stem cells
  • molecular dynamics
  • metabolic syndrome
  • skeletal muscle
  • bone marrow
  • single molecule
  • structure activity relationship