Literature DB >> 33689304

The Chemical Synthesis of Insulin: An Enduring Challenge.

John A Karas, John D Wade, Mohammed Akhter Hossain.   

Abstract

The pancreatic peptide hormone insulin, first discovered exactly 100 years ago, is essential for glycemic control and is used as a therapeutic for the treatment of type 1 and, increasingly, type 2 diabetes. With a worsening global diabetes epidemic and its significant health budget imposition, there is a great demand for new analogues possessing improved physical and functional properties. However, the chemical synthesis of insulin's intricate 51-amino acid, two-chain, three-disulfide bond structure, together with the poor physicochemical properties of both the individual chains and the hormone itself, has long represented a major challenge to organic chemists. This review provides a timely overview of the past efforts to chemically assemble this fascinating hormone using an array of strategies to enable both correct folding of the two chains and selective formation of disulfide bonds. These methods not only have contributed to general peptide synthesis chemistry and enabled access to the greatly growing numbers of insulin-like and cystine-rich peptides but also, today, enable the production of insulin at the synthetic efficiency levels of recombinant DNA expression methods. They have led to the production of a myriad of novel analogues with optimized structural and functional features and of the feasibility for their industrial manufacture.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33689304     DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.0c01251

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chem Rev        ISSN: 0009-2665            Impact factor:   60.622


  3 in total

1.  Improved Handling of Peptide Segments Using Side Chain-Based "Helping Hand" Solubilizing Tools.

Authors:  Michael T Jacobsen; Paul Spaltenstein; Riley J Giesler; Danny Hung-Chieh Chou; Michael S Kay
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2022

2.  Thin Films of Lanthanide Stearates as Modifiers of the Q-Sense Device Sensor for Studying Insulin Adsorption.

Authors:  Olga Ladikan; Elena Silyavka; Andrei Mitrofanov; Anastasia Laptenkova; Vladimir Shilovskikh; Petr Kolonitckii; Nikita Ivanov; Andrey Remezov; Anna Fedorova; Vassily Khripun; Olga Pestova; Ekaterina P Podolskaya; Nikolai G Sukhodolov; Artem A Selyutin
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2022-07-14

3.  In vivo, in vitro and in silico: an open space for the development of microbe-based applications of synthetic biology.

Authors:  Antoine Danchin
Journal:  Microb Biotechnol       Date:  2021-09-27       Impact factor: 5.813

  3 in total

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