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DPP-IV-resistant, long-acting oxyntomodulin derivatives

Authors :
Simone Bufali
Lan Zhu
Paul E. Carrington
Annunziata Langella
Elisabetta Bianchi
Alessandro Pocai
Maria Veneziano
Ranabir SinhaRoy
Fabio Bonelli
Marco Finotto
Antonello Pessi
Edith Monteagudo
Simona Cianetti
Alessia Santoprete
Elena Capito
Karolina Zytko
Donald J. Marsh
Paolo Ingallinella
Source :
Journal of Peptide Science. 17:270-280
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Wiley, 2011.

Abstract

Obesity is one of the major risk factors for type 2 diabetes, and the development of agents, that can simultaneously achieve glucose control and weight loss, is being actively pursued. Therapies based on peptide mimetics of the gut hormone glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) are rapidly gaining favor, due to their ability to increase insulin secretion in a strictly glucose-dependent manner, with little or no risk of hypoglycemia, and to their additional benefit of causing a modest, but durable weight loss. Oxyntomodulin (OXM), a 37-amino acid peptide hormone of the glucagon (GCG) family with dual agonistic activity on both the GLP-1 (GLP1R) and the GCG (GCGR) receptors, has been shown to reduce food intake and body weight in humans, with a lower incidence of treatment-associated nausea than GLP-1 mimetics. As for other peptide hormones, its clinical application is limited by the short circulatory half-life, a major component of which is cleavage by the enzyme dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP-IV). SAR studies on OXM, described herein, led to the identification of molecules resistant to DPP-IV degradation, with increased potency as compared to the natural hormone. Analogs derivatized with a cholesterol moiety display increased duration of action in vivo. Moreover, we identified a single substitution which can change the OXM pharmacological profile from a dual GLP1R/GCGR agonist to a selective GLP1R agonist. The latter finding enabled studies, described in detail in a separate study (Pocai A, Carrington PE, Adams JR, Wright M, Eiermann G, Zhu L, Du X, Petrov A, Lassman ME, Jiang G, Liu F, Miller C, Tota LM, Zhou G, Zhang X, Sountis MM, Santoprete A, Capito E, Chicchi GG, Thornberry N, Bianchi E, Pessi A, Marsh DJ, SinhaRoy R. Glucagon-like peptide 1/glucagon receptor dual agonism reverses obesity in mice. Diabetes 2009; 58: 2258-2266), which highlight the potential of GLP1R/GCGR dual agonists as a potentially superior class of therapeutics over the pure GLP1R agonists currently in clinical use.

Details

ISSN :
10752617 and 22582266
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Peptide Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e8cdeac8d16db9307c1df0f4fe397e1b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/psc.1328