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    A New Approach to Search for the Bioactive Conformation of Glucagon:  Positional Cyclization Scanning

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    Date
    2001-09
    Author
    Ahn, Jung-Mo
    Gitu, Peter M
    Medeiros, Matthew
    Swift, Jennifer R
    Trivedi, Dev
    Hruby, Victor J
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    In search for the bioactive conformation of glucagon, “positional cyclization scanning” was used to determine secondary structures of glucagon required for maximal interaction with the glucagon receptor. Because glucagon is flexible in nature, its bioactive conformation is not known except for an amphiphilic helical conformation at the C-terminal region. To understand the conformational requirement for the N-terminal region that appears to be essential for signal transduction, a series of glucagon analogues conformationally constrained by disulfide or lactam bridges have been designed and synthesized. The conformational restrictions via disulfide bridges between cysteine i and cysteine i + 5, or lactam bridges between lysine i and glutamic acid i + 4, were applied to induce and stabilize certain corresponding secondary structures. The results from the binding assays showed that all the cyclic analogues with disulfide bridges bound to the receptor with significantly reduced binding affinities compared to their linear counterparts. On the contrary, glucagon analogues containing lactam bridges, in particular, c[Lys5, Glu9]glucagon amide (10) and c[Lys17, Glu21]glucagon amide (14), demonstrated more than 7-fold increased receptor binding affinities than native glucagon. These results suggest that the bioactive conformation of glucagon may adopt a helical conformation at the N-terminal region as well as the C-terminal region, which was not evident from earlier biophysical studies of glucagon.
    URI
    http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jm010091q
    http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/44418
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11543679
    Citation
    Jung-Mo Ahn , Peter M. Gitu , Matthew Medeiros et al (2001). A New Approach to Search for the Bioactive Conformation of Glucagon:  Positional Cyclization Scanning. J. Med. Chem., 44 (19), pp 3109–3116
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