Engineering of a Biologically Active Glycosylated Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Analogue.
Chaitra ChandrashekarFeng LinYuji NishiuchiSam F MohammedBarbara F WhiteYanni ArsenakisElita YuliantiePeishen ZhaoSam van DunAnna KoijenYasuhiro KajiharaDenise WoottenGarron T DoddLeendert J van den BosJohn D WadeMohammed Akhter HossainPublished in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2024)
Glucagon-like peptide receptor (GLP-1R) agonists (e.g., semaglutide, liraglutide, etc.) are efficient treatment options for people with type 2 diabetes and obesity. The manufacturing method to produce semaglutide, a blockbuster GLP-1 drug on the market, involves multistep synthesis. The large peptide has a hydrophobic fatty acid side chain that makes it sparingly soluble, and its handling, purification, and large-scale production difficult. The growing demand for semaglutide that the manufacturer is not capable of addressing immediately triggered a worldwide shortage. Thus, we have developed a potential alternative analogue to semaglutide by replacing the hydrophobic fatty acid with a hydrophilic human complex-type biantennary oligosaccharide. Our novel glycoGLP-1 analogue was isolated in an ∼10-fold higher yield compared with semaglutide. Importantly, our glycoGLP-1 analogue possessed a similar GLP-1R activation potency to semaglutide and was biologically active in vivo in reducing glucose levels to a similar degree as semaglutide.