| Literature DB >> 27617429 |
John G Menting1, Joanna Gajewiak2, Christopher A MacRaild3, Danny Hung-Chieh Chou4, Maria M Disotuar4, Nicholas A Smith5, Charleen Miller6, Judit Erchegyi6, Jean E Rivier6, Baldomero M Olivera2, Briony E Forbes7, Brian J Smith5, Raymond S Norton3, Helena Safavi-Hemami2,8, Michael C Lawrence1,9.
Abstract
Insulins in the venom of certain fish-hunting cone snails facilitate prey capture by rapidly inducing hypoglycemic shock. One such insulin, Conus geographus G1 (Con-Ins G1), is the smallest known insulin found in nature and lacks the C-terminal segment of the B chain that, in human insulin, mediates engagement of the insulin receptor and assembly of the hormone's hexameric storage form. Removal of this segment (residues B23-B30) in human insulin results in substantial loss of receptor affinity. Here, we found that Con-Ins G1 is monomeric, strongly binds the human insulin receptor and activates receptor signaling. Con-Ins G1 thus is a naturally occurring B-chain-minimized mimetic of human insulin. Our crystal structure of Con-Ins G1 reveals a tertiary structure highly similar to that of human insulin and indicates how Con-Ins G1's lack of an equivalent to the key receptor-engaging residue PheB24 is mitigated. These findings may facilitate efforts to design ultrarapid-acting therapeutic insulins.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27617429 DOI: 10.1038/nsmb.3292
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Struct Mol Biol ISSN: 1545-9985 Impact factor: 15.369