Further Developments towards a Minimal Potent Derivative of Human Relaxin-2.
Handley. Thomas N G TNG; Praveen. Praveen P; Tailhades. Julien J; Wu. Hongkang H; Bathgate. Ross A D RAD; Hossain. Mohammed Akhter MA
Key Findings
- B7‑33, a single‑chain version of relaxin‑2, shows anti‑fibrotic effects comparable to the full hormone in fibroblasts that naturally express the RXFP1 receptor.
- In multiple animal models, B7‑33 successfully reversed organ fibrosis, demonstrating pre‑clinical therapeutic potential.
- Current work focuses on improving the peptide’s stability and activity by adding Aib residues and hydrocarbon staples to restore the helical structure of the native hormone.
Practical Outcomes
- At this stage B7‑33 is still a laboratory tool, not a supplement or drug you can use. The findings confirm that a smaller relaxin fragment can work against fibrosis, but more chemistry work is needed before any dosing or self‑experiment protocols could be considered. Keep an eye on future studies for a more stable, potent version that might become usable.
Summary
Scientists are tweaking a tiny piece of a hormone called relaxin (named B7‑33) to make it more stable and effective at fighting tissue scarring. In lab cells that naturally have the relaxin receptor, B7‑33 works as well as the full hormone, and it has helped reduce organ fibrosis in animal studies. The researchers are now trying chemical tricks (Aib substitution and hydrocarbon stapling) to make the peptide hold its shape better and act stronger.
Abstract
Human relaxin-2 (H2 relaxin) is a peptide hormone with potent vasodilatory and anti-fibrotic effects, which is of interest for the treatment of heart failure and fibrosis. H2 relaxin binds to the Relaxin Family Peptide Receptor 1 (RXFP1). Native H2 relaxin is a two-chain, three-disulfide-bond-containing peptide, which is unstable in human serum and difficult to synthesize efficiently. In 2016, our group developed B7-33, a single-chain peptide derived from the B-chain of H2 relaxin. B7-33 demonstrated poor affinity and potency in HEK cells overexpressing RXFP1; however, it displayed equivalent potency to H2 relaxin in fibroblasts natively expressing RXFP1, where it also demonstrated the anti-fibrotic effects of the native hormone. B7-33 reversed organ fibrosis in numerous pre-clinical animal studies. Here, we detail our efforts towards a minimal H2 relaxin scaffold and attempts to improve scaffold activity through Aib substitution and hydrocarbon stapling to re-create the peptide helicity present in the native H2 relaxin.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-08-11T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/ijms241612670
4
34