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B7-33

Relaxin B7-33, Single-chain relaxin analog

Quick Stats
Studies 13
Trials 0
Score 2
2017 pubmed 28 citations

B7-33 replicates the vasoprotective functions of human relaxin-2 (serelaxin).

Marshall. Sarah A SA; O'Sullivan. Kelly K; Ng. Hooi Hooi HH; Bathgate. Ross A D RAD; Parry. Laura J LJ; Hossain. Mohammed Akhter MA; Leo. Chen Huei CH

Key Findings

  • B7-33 boosted bradykinin‑driven relaxation in rat mesenteric arteries similar to serelaxin
  • No significant effect on small renal artery or abdominal aorta
  • B7-33 prevented endothelial dysfunction in mouse mesenteric arteries exposed to placental trophoblast media

Practical Outcomes

  • The peptide shows promise as a cheaper alternative to serelaxin for protecting blood vessels, but because the work is limited to animal models, it isn’t ready for self‑experimentation. More research is needed to determine safe human doses and real‑world benefits.

Summary

In rats, a short peptide called B7-33 acted like the drug serelaxin, helping blood vessels relax better in the gut and stopping damage caused by a pregnancy‑related stress factor, but it didn’t affect other vessels. The study was done in animals and lab dishes, not people, so it’s not a ready‑to‑use supplement yet.

Abstract

Recombinant H2 relaxin (serelaxin) has gained considerable attention as a new vasoprotective drug, largely due to its potential therapeutic effects in heart failure and fibrosis. However, serelaxin is laborious and costly to produce. A single-chain peptidomimetic, B7-33, has been developed to overcome these problems but little is known about its biological actions in the vascular system. This study first compared the rapid vascular effects of an acute bolus injection of B7-33 compared with serelaxin. Male Wistar rats received a tail vein injection of placebo (20mM sodium acetate), B7-33 (13.3μg/kg) or serelaxin (26.6μg/kg). Three hours later vascular function in the mesenteric artery, small renal artery and abdominal aorta was assessed by wire myography. B7-33 and serelaxin selectively enhanced bradykinin-mediated endothelium-dependent relaxation in the rat mesenteric artery by increasing endothelium-derived hyperpolarization, but had no overall effects on relaxation in the small renal artery or aorta. We then compared the actions of B7-33 and serelaxin in an ex vivo model of vascular disease using virgin female mouse mesenteric arteries pre-incubated in placental trophoblast conditioned media to induce endothelial dysfunction characteristic of preeclampsia. Co-incubation of these arteries in trophoblast conditioned media with B7-33 or serelaxin (15, 30nM) prevented the development of endothelial dysfunction. In conclusion, equimolar doses of B7-33 replicated the acute beneficial vascular effects of serelaxin in rat mesenteric arteries and also prevented endothelial dysfunction induced by placental trophoblast conditioned media in mouse mesenteric arteries. Therefore, B7-33 should be considered as a cost-effective vasoactive therapeutic in cardiovascular diseases, including preeclampsia.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-05-03T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.ejphar.2017.05.005

Citations

28

References

32