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Design, Characterization, and First-In-Human Study of the Vascular Actions of a Novel Biased Apelin Receptor Agonist

[Pyr(1)]apelin-13 is an endogenous vasodilator and inotrope but is downregulated in pulmonary hypertension and heart failure, making the apelin receptor an attractive therapeutic target. Agonists acting at the same G-protein–coupled receptor can be engineered to stabilize different conformational st...

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Autores principales: Brame, Aimee L., Maguire, Janet J., Yang, Peiran, Dyson, Alex, Torella, Rubben, Cheriyan, Joseph, Singer, Mervyn, Glen, Robert C., Wilkinson, Ian B., Davenport, Anthony P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4354462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25712721
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.114.05099
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author Brame, Aimee L.
Maguire, Janet J.
Yang, Peiran
Dyson, Alex
Torella, Rubben
Cheriyan, Joseph
Singer, Mervyn
Glen, Robert C.
Wilkinson, Ian B.
Davenport, Anthony P.
author_facet Brame, Aimee L.
Maguire, Janet J.
Yang, Peiran
Dyson, Alex
Torella, Rubben
Cheriyan, Joseph
Singer, Mervyn
Glen, Robert C.
Wilkinson, Ian B.
Davenport, Anthony P.
author_sort Brame, Aimee L.
collection PubMed
description [Pyr(1)]apelin-13 is an endogenous vasodilator and inotrope but is downregulated in pulmonary hypertension and heart failure, making the apelin receptor an attractive therapeutic target. Agonists acting at the same G-protein–coupled receptor can be engineered to stabilize different conformational states and function as biased ligands, selectively stimulating either G-protein or β-arrestin pathways. We used molecular dynamics simulations of apelin/receptor interactions to design cyclic analogues and identified MM07 as a biased agonist. In β-arrestin and internalization assays (G-protein–independent), MM07 was 2 orders of magnitude less potent than [Pyr(1)]apelin-13. In a G-protein–dependent saphenous vein contraction assay, both peptides had comparable potency (pD(2):[Pyr(1)]apelin-13 9.93±0.24; MM07 9.54±0.42) and maximum responses with a resulting bias for MM07 of ≈350- to 1300-fold for the G-protein pathway. In rats, systemic infusions of MM07 (10-100nmol) caused a dose-dependent increase in cardiac output that was significantly greater than the response to [Pyr(1)]apelin-13. Similarly, in human volunteers, MM07 produced a significant dose-dependent increase in forearm blood flow with a maximum dilatation double that is seen with [Pyr(1)]apelin-13. Additionally, repeated doses of MM07 produced reproducible increases in forearm blood flow. These responses are consistent with a more efficacious action of the biased agonist. In human hand vein, both peptides reversed an established norepinephrine constrictor response and significantly increased venous flow. Our results suggest that MM07 acting as a biased agonist at the apelin receptor can preferentially stimulate the G-protein pathway, which could translate to improved efficacy in the clinic by selectively stimulating vasodilatation and inotropic actions but avoiding activating detrimental β-arrestin–dependent pathways.
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spelling pubmed-43544622015-03-16 Design, Characterization, and First-In-Human Study of the Vascular Actions of a Novel Biased Apelin Receptor Agonist Brame, Aimee L. Maguire, Janet J. Yang, Peiran Dyson, Alex Torella, Rubben Cheriyan, Joseph Singer, Mervyn Glen, Robert C. Wilkinson, Ian B. Davenport, Anthony P. Hypertension Original Articles [Pyr(1)]apelin-13 is an endogenous vasodilator and inotrope but is downregulated in pulmonary hypertension and heart failure, making the apelin receptor an attractive therapeutic target. Agonists acting at the same G-protein–coupled receptor can be engineered to stabilize different conformational states and function as biased ligands, selectively stimulating either G-protein or β-arrestin pathways. We used molecular dynamics simulations of apelin/receptor interactions to design cyclic analogues and identified MM07 as a biased agonist. In β-arrestin and internalization assays (G-protein–independent), MM07 was 2 orders of magnitude less potent than [Pyr(1)]apelin-13. In a G-protein–dependent saphenous vein contraction assay, both peptides had comparable potency (pD(2):[Pyr(1)]apelin-13 9.93±0.24; MM07 9.54±0.42) and maximum responses with a resulting bias for MM07 of ≈350- to 1300-fold for the G-protein pathway. In rats, systemic infusions of MM07 (10-100nmol) caused a dose-dependent increase in cardiac output that was significantly greater than the response to [Pyr(1)]apelin-13. Similarly, in human volunteers, MM07 produced a significant dose-dependent increase in forearm blood flow with a maximum dilatation double that is seen with [Pyr(1)]apelin-13. Additionally, repeated doses of MM07 produced reproducible increases in forearm blood flow. These responses are consistent with a more efficacious action of the biased agonist. In human hand vein, both peptides reversed an established norepinephrine constrictor response and significantly increased venous flow. Our results suggest that MM07 acting as a biased agonist at the apelin receptor can preferentially stimulate the G-protein pathway, which could translate to improved efficacy in the clinic by selectively stimulating vasodilatation and inotropic actions but avoiding activating detrimental β-arrestin–dependent pathways. Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins 2015-04 2015-03-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4354462/ /pubmed/25712721 http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.114.05099 Text en © 2015 The Authors. Hypertension is published on behalf of the American Heart Association, Inc., by Wolters Kluwer. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) , which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Brame, Aimee L.
Maguire, Janet J.
Yang, Peiran
Dyson, Alex
Torella, Rubben
Cheriyan, Joseph
Singer, Mervyn
Glen, Robert C.
Wilkinson, Ian B.
Davenport, Anthony P.
Design, Characterization, and First-In-Human Study of the Vascular Actions of a Novel Biased Apelin Receptor Agonist
title Design, Characterization, and First-In-Human Study of the Vascular Actions of a Novel Biased Apelin Receptor Agonist
title_full Design, Characterization, and First-In-Human Study of the Vascular Actions of a Novel Biased Apelin Receptor Agonist
title_fullStr Design, Characterization, and First-In-Human Study of the Vascular Actions of a Novel Biased Apelin Receptor Agonist
title_full_unstemmed Design, Characterization, and First-In-Human Study of the Vascular Actions of a Novel Biased Apelin Receptor Agonist
title_short Design, Characterization, and First-In-Human Study of the Vascular Actions of a Novel Biased Apelin Receptor Agonist
title_sort design, characterization, and first-in-human study of the vascular actions of a novel biased apelin receptor agonist
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4354462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25712721
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.114.05099
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