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Improved Glucose Control and Reduced Body Weight in Rodents with Dual Mechanism of Action Peptide Hybrids

Combination therapy is being increasingly used as a treatment paradigm for metabolic diseases such as diabetes and obesity. In the peptide therapeutics realm, recent work has highlighted the therapeutic potential of chimeric peptides that act on two distinct receptors, thereby harnessing parallel co...

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Autores principales: Trevaskis, James L., Mack, Christine M., Sun, Chengzao, Soares, Christopher J., D’Souza, Lawrence J., Levy, Odile E., Lewis, Diane Y., Jodka, Carolyn M., Tatarkiewicz, Krystyna, Gedulin, Bronislava, Gupta, Swati, Wittmer, Carrie, Hanley, Michael, Forood, Bruce, Parkes, David G., Ghosh, Soumitra S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3805588/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24167604
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078154
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author Trevaskis, James L.
Mack, Christine M.
Sun, Chengzao
Soares, Christopher J.
D’Souza, Lawrence J.
Levy, Odile E.
Lewis, Diane Y.
Jodka, Carolyn M.
Tatarkiewicz, Krystyna
Gedulin, Bronislava
Gupta, Swati
Wittmer, Carrie
Hanley, Michael
Forood, Bruce
Parkes, David G.
Ghosh, Soumitra S.
author_facet Trevaskis, James L.
Mack, Christine M.
Sun, Chengzao
Soares, Christopher J.
D’Souza, Lawrence J.
Levy, Odile E.
Lewis, Diane Y.
Jodka, Carolyn M.
Tatarkiewicz, Krystyna
Gedulin, Bronislava
Gupta, Swati
Wittmer, Carrie
Hanley, Michael
Forood, Bruce
Parkes, David G.
Ghosh, Soumitra S.
author_sort Trevaskis, James L.
collection PubMed
description Combination therapy is being increasingly used as a treatment paradigm for metabolic diseases such as diabetes and obesity. In the peptide therapeutics realm, recent work has highlighted the therapeutic potential of chimeric peptides that act on two distinct receptors, thereby harnessing parallel complementary mechanisms to induce additive or synergistic benefit compared to monotherapy. Here, we extend this hypothesis by linking a known anti-diabetic peptide with an anti-obesity peptide into a novel peptide hybrid, which we termed a phybrid. We report on the synthesis and biological activity of two such phybrids (AC164204 and AC164209), comprised of a glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP1-R) agonist, and exenatide analog, AC3082, covalently linked to a second generation amylin analog, davalintide. Both molecules acted as full agonists at their cognate receptors in vitro, albeit with reduced potency at the calcitonin receptor indicating slightly perturbed amylin agonism. In obese diabetic Lep(ob)/Lep (ob) mice sustained infusion of AC164204 and AC164209 reduced glucose and glycated haemoglobin (Hb(A1c)) equivalently but induced greater weight loss relative to exenatide administration alone. Weight loss was similar to that induced by combined administration of exenatide and davalintide. In diet-induced obese rats, both phybrids dose-dependently reduced food intake and body weight to a greater extent than exenatide or davalintide alone, and equal to co-infusion of exenatide and davalintide. Phybrid-mediated and exenatide + davalintide-mediated weight loss was associated with reduced adiposity and preservation of lean mass. These data are the first to provide in vivo proof-of-concept for multi-pathway targeting in metabolic disease via a peptide hybrid, demonstrating that this approach is as effective as co-administration of individual peptides.
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spelling pubmed-38055882013-10-28 Improved Glucose Control and Reduced Body Weight in Rodents with Dual Mechanism of Action Peptide Hybrids Trevaskis, James L. Mack, Christine M. Sun, Chengzao Soares, Christopher J. D’Souza, Lawrence J. Levy, Odile E. Lewis, Diane Y. Jodka, Carolyn M. Tatarkiewicz, Krystyna Gedulin, Bronislava Gupta, Swati Wittmer, Carrie Hanley, Michael Forood, Bruce Parkes, David G. Ghosh, Soumitra S. PLoS One Research Article Combination therapy is being increasingly used as a treatment paradigm for metabolic diseases such as diabetes and obesity. In the peptide therapeutics realm, recent work has highlighted the therapeutic potential of chimeric peptides that act on two distinct receptors, thereby harnessing parallel complementary mechanisms to induce additive or synergistic benefit compared to monotherapy. Here, we extend this hypothesis by linking a known anti-diabetic peptide with an anti-obesity peptide into a novel peptide hybrid, which we termed a phybrid. We report on the synthesis and biological activity of two such phybrids (AC164204 and AC164209), comprised of a glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP1-R) agonist, and exenatide analog, AC3082, covalently linked to a second generation amylin analog, davalintide. Both molecules acted as full agonists at their cognate receptors in vitro, albeit with reduced potency at the calcitonin receptor indicating slightly perturbed amylin agonism. In obese diabetic Lep(ob)/Lep (ob) mice sustained infusion of AC164204 and AC164209 reduced glucose and glycated haemoglobin (Hb(A1c)) equivalently but induced greater weight loss relative to exenatide administration alone. Weight loss was similar to that induced by combined administration of exenatide and davalintide. In diet-induced obese rats, both phybrids dose-dependently reduced food intake and body weight to a greater extent than exenatide or davalintide alone, and equal to co-infusion of exenatide and davalintide. Phybrid-mediated and exenatide + davalintide-mediated weight loss was associated with reduced adiposity and preservation of lean mass. These data are the first to provide in vivo proof-of-concept for multi-pathway targeting in metabolic disease via a peptide hybrid, demonstrating that this approach is as effective as co-administration of individual peptides. Public Library of Science 2013-10-22 /pmc/articles/PMC3805588/ /pubmed/24167604 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078154 Text en © 2013 James Trevaskis http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Trevaskis, James L.
Mack, Christine M.
Sun, Chengzao
Soares, Christopher J.
D’Souza, Lawrence J.
Levy, Odile E.
Lewis, Diane Y.
Jodka, Carolyn M.
Tatarkiewicz, Krystyna
Gedulin, Bronislava
Gupta, Swati
Wittmer, Carrie
Hanley, Michael
Forood, Bruce
Parkes, David G.
Ghosh, Soumitra S.
Improved Glucose Control and Reduced Body Weight in Rodents with Dual Mechanism of Action Peptide Hybrids
title Improved Glucose Control and Reduced Body Weight in Rodents with Dual Mechanism of Action Peptide Hybrids
title_full Improved Glucose Control and Reduced Body Weight in Rodents with Dual Mechanism of Action Peptide Hybrids
title_fullStr Improved Glucose Control and Reduced Body Weight in Rodents with Dual Mechanism of Action Peptide Hybrids
title_full_unstemmed Improved Glucose Control and Reduced Body Weight in Rodents with Dual Mechanism of Action Peptide Hybrids
title_short Improved Glucose Control and Reduced Body Weight in Rodents with Dual Mechanism of Action Peptide Hybrids
title_sort improved glucose control and reduced body weight in rodents with dual mechanism of action peptide hybrids
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3805588/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24167604
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078154
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