A Lipidated Single-B-Chain Derivative of Relaxin Exhibits Improved In Vitro Serum Stability without Altering Activity.
Praveen. Praveen P; Wang. Chao C; Handley. Thomas N G TNG; Wu. Hongkang H; Samuel. Chrishan S CS; Bathgate. Ross A D RAD; Hossain. Mohammed Akhter MA
Key Findings
- B7-33 is a single‑chain peptide derived from the B‑chain of human relaxin‑2 and acts as an RXFP1 agonist.
- Unmodified B7-33 has a very short in‑vitro serum half‑life (~6 min).
- Lipidation (adding a fatty‑acid chain with an optimal spacer) increases the half‑life to ~60 min while preserving receptor activity.
Practical Outcomes
- For now, the lipidated B7-33 isn’t ready for self‑experimentation, but the study shows that attaching fatty acids can dramatically improve peptide stability in blood. If future animal work confirms safety and efficacy, a longer‑acting relaxin‑like peptide could become a tool for anti‑fibrotic, vasodilatory, or cardioprotective protocols.
Summary
Scientists made a simpler version of the hormone relaxin (called B7-33) that can still activate its receptor, but it disappears from blood very quickly. By attaching a fatty‑acid chain with the right length, they stretched its half‑life in test‑tube serum from about 6 minutes to roughly an hour, without losing activity. The next step is to test this longer‑lasting version in animals.
Abstract
Human relaxin-2 (H2 relaxin) is therapeutically very important due to its strong anti-fibrotic, vasodilatory, and cardioprotective effects. Therefore, relaxin's receptor, relaxin family peptide receptor 1 (RXFP1), is a potential target for the treatment of fibrosis and related disorders, including heart failure. H2 relaxin has a complex two-chain structure (A and B) and three disulfide bridges. Our laboratory has recently developed B7-33 peptide, a single-chain agonist based on the B-chain of H2 relaxin. However, the peptide B7-33 has a short circulation time in vitro in serum (t<sub>1/2</sub> = ~6 min). In this study, we report structure-activity relationship studies on B7-33 utilizing different fatty-acid conjugations at different positions. We have shown that by fatty-acid conjugation with an appropriate spacer length, the in vitro half-life of B7-33 can be increased from 6 min to 60 min. In the future, the lead lipidated molecule will be studied in animal models to measure its PK/PD properties, which will lead to their pre-clinical applications.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-04-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/ijms24076616
7
36