Engineering a long acting, non-biased relaxin agonist using Protein-in-Protein technology.

Fibrosis Protein-in-protein RXFP1 Relaxin

Journal

Biochemical pharmacology
ISSN: 1873-2968
Titre abrégé: Biochem Pharmacol
Pays: England
ID NLM: 0101032

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
28 Jun 2024
Historique:
received: 16 02 2024
revised: 25 06 2024
accepted: 27 06 2024
medline: 1 7 2024
pubmed: 1 7 2024
entrez: 30 6 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

The peptide hormone relaxin plays a critical role in tissue remodeling in a variety of tissues through activation of its cognate receptor, RXFP1. Relaxin's ability to modify extracellular matrices has provided a strong rationale for treating fibrosis in a variety of tissues. Treatment with recombinant relaxin peptides in clinical studies of heart failure has not yet proven useful, likely due to the short half-life of infused peptide. To circumvent this particular pharmacokinetic pitfall we have used a Protein-in-Protein (PiP) antibody technology described previously, to insert a single-chain human relaxin construct into the complementarity-determining region (CDR) of an immunoglobulin G (IgG) backbone, creating a relaxin molecule with a half-life of ∼4-5 days in mice. Relaxin-PiP biologics displaced Europium-labeled human relaxin in RXFP1-expressing cells and demonstrated full agonist activity on both human and mouse RXFP1 receptors. Relaxin-PiPs did not show signal transduction bias, as they activated cAMP in THP-1 cells, and cGMP and pERK signaling in primary human cardiac fibroblasts. In an induced carbon tetrachloride mouse model of liver fibrosis one relaxin-PiP, R2-PiP, caused reduction of liver lesions, ameliorated collagen accumulation in the liver with the corresponding reduction of Collagen1a1 gene expression, and increased cell proliferation in hepatic parenchyma. These relaxin biologics represent a novel approach to the design of a long-acting RXFP1 agonist to probe the clinical utility of relaxin/RXFP1 signaling to treat a variety of human fibrotic diseases.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38945278
pii: S0006-2952(24)00384-8
doi: 10.1016/j.bcp.2024.116401
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

116401

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Auteurs

Irina U Agoulnik (IU)

Department of Human and Molecular Genetics, Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA.

Elena M Kaftanovskaya (EM)

Department of Human and Molecular Genetics, Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA.

Courtney Myhr (C)

Department of Human and Molecular Genetics, Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA.

Ross A D Bathgate (RAD)

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia; Department of Biochemistry and Pharmacology, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia.

Martina Kocan (M)

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia.

Yingjie Peng (Y)

Scripps Research, 10550 N Torrey Pines Rd, La Jolla, CA 92037 USA.

Ronald M Lindsay (RM)

Zebra Biologic, Inc., 1041 Old Marlboro Road, Concord, MA 01742 USA.

Peter S DiStefano (PS)

Zebra Biologic, Inc., 1041 Old Marlboro Road, Concord, MA 01742 USA. Electronic address: petedistefano88@gmail.com.

Alexander I Agoulnik (AI)

Department of Human and Molecular Genetics, Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA. Electronic address: aagoulni@fiu.edu.

Classifications MeSH