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The Structural and Functional Role of the B‐chain C‐terminal Arginine in the Relaxin‐3 Peptide Antagonist, R3(BΔ23‐27)R/I5
Author(s) -
Hossain Mohammed Akhter,
Bathgate Ross A. D.,
Rosengren K. Johan,
Shabanpoor Fazel,
Zhang Suode,
Lin Feng,
Tregear Geoffrey W.,
Wade John D.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
chemical biology and drug design
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.59
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1747-0285
pISSN - 1747-0277
DOI - 10.1111/j.1747-0285.2008.00756.x
Subject(s) - relaxin , arginine , peptide , antagonist , terminal (telecommunication) , chemistry , chain (unit) , amino terminal , stereochemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , peptide sequence , receptor , biology , computer science , amino acid , physics , telecommunications , astronomy , gene
Relaxin‐3, a member of the insulin superfamily, is involved in regulating stress and feeding behavior. It is highly expressed in the brain and is the endogenous ligand for the receptor RXFP3. As relaxin‐3 also interacts with the relaxin receptor RXFP1, selective agonists and antagonists are crucial for studying the physiological function(s) of the relaxin‐3/RXFP3 pair. The analog R3(BΔ23‐27)R/I5, in which a C‐terminally truncated human relaxin‐3 (H3) B‐chain is combined with the INSL5 A‐chain, is a potent selective RXFP3 antagonist and has an Arg residue remaining on the B‐chain C‐terminus as a consequence of the recombinant protein production process. To investigate the role of this residue in the RXFP3 receptor binding and activation, the analogs R3(BΔ23‐27)R/I5 and R3(BΔ23‐27)R containing the B‐chain C‐terminal Arg as well as R3(BΔ23‐27)/I5 and R3(BΔ23‐27), both lacking the Arg, were chemically assembled and their secondary structure and receptor activity assessed. The peptides generally had a similar conformation but those with the extra Arg residue displayed a significantly increased affinity for the RXFP3. Interestingly, in contrast to R3(BΔ23‐27)R and R3(BΔ23‐27)R/I5, the peptide R3(BΔ23‐27) is a weak agonist. This suggests that the C‐terminal Arg, although increasing the affinity, alters the manner in which the peptide binds to the receptor and thereby prevents activation, giving R3(BΔ23‐27)R/I5 its potent antagonistic activity.