Synthesis, Biophysical, and Pharmacological Evaluation
of the Melanocortin Agonist AST3-88: Modifications of Peptide Backbone
at Trp 7 Position Lead to a Potent, Selective, and Stable Ligand of
the Melanocortin 4 Receptor (MC4R)
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Abstract
The
melanocortin-3 (MC3R) and melanocortin-4 (MC4R) receptors are
expressed in the brain and are implicated in the regulation of food
intake and energy homeostasis. The endogenous agonist ligands for
these receptors (α-, β-, γ-MSH and ACTH) are linear
peptides with limited receptor subtype selectivity and metabolic stability,
thus minimizing their use as probes to characterize the overlapping
pharmacological and physiological functions of the melanocortin receptor
subtypes. In the present study, an engineered template, in which the
peptide backbone was modified by a heterocyclic reverse turn mimetic
at the Trp<sup>7</sup> residue, was synthesized using solid phase
peptide synthesis and characterized by a β-galactosidase cAMP
based reporter gene assay. The functional assay identified a ∼5
nM mouse MC4R agonist (AST3-88) with more than 50-fold selectivity
over the mMC3R. Biophysical studies (2D <sup>1</sup>H NMR spectroscopy
and molecular dynamics) of AST3-88 identified a type VIII β-turn
secondary structure spanning the pharmacophore domain stabilized by
the intramolecular interactions between the side chains of the His
and Trp residues. Enzymatic studies of AST3-88 revealed enhanced stability
of AST3-88 over the α-MSH endogenous peptide in rat serum. Upon
central administration of AST3-88 into rats, a decreased food intake
response was observed. This is the first study to probe the in vivo
physiological activity of this engineered peptide-heterocycle template.
These findings advance the present knowledge of pharmacophore design
for potent, selective, and metabolically stable melanocortin ligands