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Browsing by Author "Rege, Nischay"
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Item Biosynthesis, structure, and folding of the insulin precursor protein(Wiley, 2018-09) Liu, Ming; Weiss, Michael A.; Arunagiri, Anoop; Yong, Jing; Rege, Nischay; Sun, Jinhong; Haataja, Leena; Kaufman, Randal J.; Arvan, Peter; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineInsulin synthesis in pancreatic β-cells is initiated as preproinsulin. Prevailing glucose concentrations, which oscillate pre- and postprandially, exert major dynamic variation in preproinsulin biosynthesis. Accompanying upregulated translation of the insulin precursor includes elements of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) translocation apparatus linked to successful orientation of the signal peptide, translocation and signal peptide cleavage of preproinsulin-all of which are necessary to initiate the pathway of proper proinsulin folding. Evolutionary pressures on the primary structure of proinsulin itself have preserved the efficiency of folding ("foldability"), and remarkably, these evolutionary pressures are distinct from those protecting the ultimate biological activity of insulin. Proinsulin foldability is manifest in the ER, in which the local environment is designed to assist in the overall load of proinsulin folding and to favour its disulphide bond formation (while limiting misfolding), all of which is closely tuned to ER stress response pathways that have complex (beneficial, as well as potentially damaging) effects on pancreatic β-cells. Proinsulin misfolding may occur as a consequence of exuberant proinsulin biosynthetic load in the ER, proinsulin coding sequence mutations, or genetic predispositions that lead to an altered ER folding environment. Proinsulin misfolding is a phenotype that is very much linked to deficient insulin production and diabetes, as is seen in a variety of contexts: rodent models bearing proinsulin-misfolding mutants, human patients with Mutant INS-gene-induced Diabetes of Youth (MIDY), animal models and human patients bearing mutations in critical ER resident proteins, and, quite possibly, in more common variety type 2 diabetes.Item Reassessment of an Innovative Insulin Analogue Excludes Protracted Action yet Highlights Distinction between External and Internal Diselenide Bridges(Wiley, 2020-04-09) Dhayalan, Balamurugan; Chen, Yen-Shan; Phillips, Nelson B.; Swain, Mamuni; Rege, Nischay; Mirsalehi, Ali; Jarosinski, Mark; Ismail-Beigi, Faramarz; Metanis, Norman; Weiss, Michael A.; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineLong-acting insulin analogues represent the most prescribed class of therapeutic proteins. An innovative design strategy was recently proposed: diselenide substitution of an external disulfide bridge. This approach exploited the distinctive physicochemical properties of selenocysteine (U). Relative to wild type (WT), Se-insulin[C7UA , C7UB ] was reported to be protected from proteolysis by insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE), predicting prolonged activity. Because of this strategy's novelty and potential clinical importance, we sought to validate these findings and test their therapeutic utility in an animal model of diabetes mellitus. Surprisingly, the analogue did not exhibit enhanced stability, and its susceptibility to cleavage by either IDE or a canonical serine protease (glutamyl endopeptidase Glu-C) was similar to WT. Moreover, the analogue's pharmacodynamic profile in rats was not prolonged relative to a rapid-acting clinical analogue (insulin lispro). Although [C7UA , C7UB ] does not confer protracted action, nonetheless its comparison to internal diselenide bridges promises to provide broad biophysical insight.Item Role of Proinsulin Self-Association in Mutant INS Gene–Induced Diabetes of Youth(American Diabetes Association, 2020-05) Sun, Jinhong; Xiong, Yi; Li, Xin; Haataja, Leena; Chen, Wei; Mir, Saiful A.; Lv, Li; Madley, Rachel; Larkin, Dennis; Anjum, Arfah; Dhayalan, Balamurugan; Rege, Nischay; Wickramasinghe, Nalinda P.; Weiss, Michael A.; Itkin-Ansari, Pamela; Kaufman, Randal J.; Ostrov, David A.; Arvan, Peter; Liu, Ming; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineAbnormal interactions between misfolded mutant and wild-type (WT) proinsulin (PI) in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) drive the molecular pathogenesis of mutant INS gene-induced diabetes of youth (MIDY). How these abnormal interactions are initiated remains unknown. Normally, PI-WT dimerizes in the ER. Here, we suggest that the normal PI-PI contact surface, involving the B-chain, contributes to dominant-negative effects of misfolded MIDY mutants. Specifically, we find that PI B-chain tyrosine-16 (Tyr-B16), which is a key residue in normal PI dimerization, helps confer dominant-negative behavior of MIDY mutant PI-C(A7)Y. Substitutions of Tyr-B16 with either Ala, Asp, or Pro in PI-C(A7)Y decrease the abnormal interactions between the MIDY mutant and PI-WT, rescuing PI-WT export, limiting ER stress, and increasing insulin production in β-cells and human islets. This study reveals the first evidence indicating that noncovalent PI-PI contact initiates dominant-negative behavior of misfolded PI, pointing to a novel therapeutic target to enhance PI-WT export and increase insulin production.Item ‘Smart’ insulin-delivery technologies and intrinsic glucose-responsive insulin analogues(SpringerLink, 2021-05) Jarosinski, Mark A.; Dhayalan, Balamurugan; Rege, Nischay; Chatterjee, Deepak; Weiss, Michael A.; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineInsulin replacement therapy for diabetes mellitus seeks to minimise excursions in blood glucose concentration above or below the therapeutic range (hyper- or hypoglycaemia). To mitigate acute and chronic risks of such excursions, glucose-responsive insulin-delivery technologies have long been sought for clinical application in type 1 and long-standing type 2 diabetes mellitus. Such 'smart' systems or insulin analogues seek to provide hormonal activity proportional to blood glucose levels without external monitoring. This review highlights three broad strategies to co-optimise mean glycaemic control and time in range: (1) coupling of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) to delivery devices (algorithm-based 'closed-loop' systems); (2) glucose-responsive polymer encapsulation of insulin; and (3) mechanism-based hormone modifications. Innovations span control algorithms for CGM-based insulin-delivery systems, glucose-responsive polymer matrices, bio-inspired design based on insulin's conformational switch mechanism upon insulin receptor engagement, and glucose-responsive modifications of new insulin analogues. In each case, innovations in insulin chemistry and formulation may enhance clinical outcomes. Prospects are discussed for intrinsic glucose-responsive insulin analogues containing a reversible switch (regulating bioavailability or conformation) that can be activated by glucose at high concentrations.Item Substitution of an Internal Disulfide Bridge with a Diselenide Enhances both Foldability and Stability of Human Insulin(Wiley, 2019) Weil-Ktorza, Orit; Rege, Nischay; Lansky, Shifra; Shalev, Deborah E.; Shoham, Gil; Weiss, Michael A.; Metanis, Norman; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineInsulin analogues, mainstays in the modern treatment of diabetes mellitus, exemplify the utility of protein engineering in molecular pharmacology. Whereas chemical syntheses of the individual A and B chains were accomplished in the early 1960s, their combination to form native insulin remains inefficient because of competing disulfide pairing and aggregation. To overcome these limitations, we envisioned an alternative approach: pairwise substitution of cysteine residues with selenocysteine (Sec, U). To this end, CysA6 and CysA11 (which form the internal intrachain A6–A11 disulfide bridge) were each replaced with Sec. The A chain[C6U, C11U] variant was prepared by solid‐phase peptide synthesis; while sulfitolysis of biosynthetic human insulin provided wild‐type B chain‐di‐S‐sulfonate. The presence of selenium atoms at these sites markedly enhanced the rate and fidelity of chain combination, thus solving a long‐standing challenge in chemical insulin synthesis. The affinity of the Se‐insulin analogue for the lectin‐purified insulin receptor was indistinguishable from that of WT‐insulin. Remarkably, the thermodynamic stability of the analogue at 25 °C, as inferred from guanidine denaturation studies, was augmented (ΔΔGu ≈0.8 kcal mol−1). In accordance with such enhanced stability, reductive unfolding of the Se‐insulin analogue and resistance to enzymatic cleavage by Glu‐C protease occurred four times more slowly than that of WT‐insulin. 2D‐NMR and X‐ray crystallographic studies demonstrated a native‐like three‐dimensional structure in which the diselenide bridge was accommodated in the hydrophobic core without steric clash.Item An ultra-stable single-chain insulin analog resists thermal inactivation and exhibits biological signaling duration equivalent to the native protein(American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2018-01-05) Glidden, Michael D.; Aldabbagh, Khadijah; Phillips, Nelson B.; Carr, Kelley; Chen, Yen-Shan; Whittaker, Jonathan; Phillips, Manijeh; Wickramasinghe, Nalinda P.; Rege, Nischay; Swain, Mamuni; Peng, Yi; Yang, Yanwu; Lawrence, Michael C.; Yee, Vivien C.; Ismail-Beigi, Faramarz; Weiss, Michael A.; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineThermal degradation of insulin complicates its delivery and use. Previous efforts to engineer ultra-stable analogs were confounded by prolonged cellular signaling in vivo, of unclear safety and complicating mealtime therapy. We therefore sought an ultra-stable analog whose potency and duration of action on intravenous bolus injection in diabetic rats are indistinguishable from wild-type (WT) insulin. Here, we describe the structure, function, and stability of such an analog, a 57-residue single-chain insulin (SCI) with multiple acidic substitutions. Cell-based studies revealed native-like signaling properties with negligible mitogenic activity. Its crystal structure, determined as a novel zinc-free hexamer at 2.8 Å, revealed a native insulin fold with incomplete or absent electron density in the C domain; complementary NMR studies are described in the accompanying article. The stability of the analog (ΔGU 5.0(±0.1) kcal/mol at 25 °C) was greater than that of WT insulin (3.3(±0.1) kcal/mol). On gentle agitation, the SCI retained full activity for >140 days at 45 °C and >48 h at 75 °C. These findings indicate that marked resistance to thermal inactivation in vitro is compatible with native duration of activity in vivo Further, whereas WT insulin forms large and heterogeneous aggregates above the standard 0.6 mm pharmaceutical strength, perturbing the pharmacokinetic properties of concentrated formulations, dynamic light scattering, and size-exclusion chromatography revealed only limited SCI self-assembly and aggregation in the concentration range 1-7 mm Such a combination of favorable biophysical and biological properties suggests that SCIs could provide a global therapeutic platform without a cold chain.