Pharmacological characterization of 30 human melanocortin-4 receptor polymorphisms with the endogenous proopiomelanocortin-derived agonists, synthetic agonists, and the endogenous agouti-related protein antagonist.
Xiang. Zhimin Z; Proneth. Bettina B; Dirain. Marvin L ML; Litherland. Sally A SA; Haskell-Luevano. Carrie C
Key Findings
- Variants F51L, I69T, and A219V keep full agonist activity but need higher ligand potency
- Variants E61K, D90N, Y157S, and C271R act as partial agonists with reduced potency
- Variants A219V, G238D, and S295P show decreased sensitivity to the antagonist AGRP
Practical Outcomes
- If you have certain MC4R SNPs, you might need higher doses of melanotan‑I to see an effect, or you may get a weaker response overall. Genetic testing could help personalize dosing, but remember these results are from lab cells and not proven in humans.
Summary
The paper tested how 30 different human MC4R gene variants react to natural hormones and synthetic peptides like NDP‑MSH and MTII (similar to melanotan‑I). Some variants still work fully but need higher amounts, others only give a weak response, and a few change how the natural blocker (AGRP) works. For DIY biohackers, this means your MC4R genetics could affect how well melanotan‑I influences appetite, weight, or other MC4R‑related effects, but the study was done in cells, not people.
Abstract
The melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) is a G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) that is expressed in the central nervous system and has a role in regulating feeding behavior, obesity, energy homeostasis, male erectile response, and blood pressure. Since the report of the MC4R knockout mouse in 1997, the field has been searching for links between this genetic biomarker and human obesity and type 2 diabetes. More then 80 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been identified from human patients, both obese and nonobese controls. Many significant studies have been performed examining the pharmacological characteristics of these hMC4R SNPs in attempts to identify a molecular defects/insights that might link a genetic factor to the obese phenotype observed in patients possessing these mutations. Our laboratory has previously reported the pharmacological characterization of 40 of these polymorphic hMC4 receptors with multiple endogenous and synthetic ligands. The goal of the current study is to perform a similar comprehensive side-by-side characterization of 30 additional human hMC4R with single nucleotide polymorphisms using multiple endogenous agonists [alpha-, beta-, and gamma(2)-melanocyte stimulating hormones (MSH) and adrenocorticotropin (ACTH)], the antagonist agouti-related protein hAGRP(87-132), and synthetic agonists [NDP-MSH, MTII, and the tetrapeptide Ac-His-dPhe-Arg-Trp-NH(2) (JRH887-9)]. These in vitro data, in some cases, provide a putative molecular link between dysfunctional hMC4R's and human obesity. These 30 hMC4R SNPs include R7H, R18H, R18L, S36Y, P48S, V50M, F51L, E61K, I69T, D90N, S94R, G98R, I121T, A154D, Y157S, W174C, G181D, F202L, A219 V, I226T, G231S, G238D, N240S, C271R, S295P, P299L, E308K, I317V, L325F, and 750DelGA. All but the N240S hMC4R were identified in obese patients. Additionally, we have characterized a double I102T/V103I hMC4R. In addition to the pharmacological characterization, the hMC4R variants were evaluated for cell surface expression by flow cytometry. The F51L, I69T, and A219V hMC4Rs possessed full agonist activity and significantly decreased endogenous agonist ligand potency. At the E61K, D90N, Y157S, and C271R hMC4Rs, all agonist ligands examined were only partially efficacious in generating a maximal signaling response (partial agonists) and possessed significantly decreased endogenous agonist ligand potency. Only the A219V, G238D, and S295P hMC4Rs possessed significantly decreased AGRP(87-132) antagonist potency. These data provide new information for use in GPCR computational development as well as insights into MC4R structure ad function.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-06-08T00:00:00.000Z
10.1021/bi100068u
58
75