| Literature DB >> 24327962 |
Brian P Ward1, Nickki L Ottaway, Diego Perez-Tilve, Dejian Ma, Vasily M Gelfanov, Matthias H Tschöp, Richard D Dimarchi.
Abstract
Medicines that decrease body weight and restore nutrient tolerance could improve human diabetes and obesity treatment outcomes. We developed lipid-acylated glucagon analogs that are co-agonists for the glucagon and glucagon-like peptide 1 receptors, and stimulate weight loss and plasma glucose lowering in pre-diabetic obese mice. Our studies identified lipid acylation (lipidation) can increase and balance in vitro potencies of select glucagon analogs for the two aforementioned receptors in a lipidation site-dependent manner. A general capacity for lipidation to enhance the secondary structure of glucagon analogs was recognized, and the energetics of this effect quantified. The molecular structure of a lipid-acylated glucagon analog in water was also characterized. These results support that lipidation can modify biological activity through thermodynamically-favorable intramolecular interactions which stabilize structure. This establishes use of lipidation to achieve specific pharmacology and implicates similar endogenous post-translational modifications as physiological tools capable of refining biological action in means previously underappreciated.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes; Glucagon; Glucagon Aib2,16 amide, Aib2,16a; Lipid; Obesity; Peptide; Structure
Year: 2013 PMID: 24327962 PMCID: PMC3854995 DOI: 10.1016/j.molmet.2013.08.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Metab ISSN: 2212-8778 Impact factor: 7.422