posted on 2023-09-26, 06:09authored byEdin Muratspahić, Despoina Aslanoglou, Andrew M. White, Claudia Draxler, Xaver Kozisek, Zara Farooq, David J. Craik, Peter J. McCormick, Thomas Durek, Christian W. Gruber
G protein-coupled receptors are among the most widely
studied classes
of drug targets. A major challenge in this field is to develop ligands
that will selectively modulate a single receptor subtype to overcome
the disadvantages of undesired “off target” effects
caused by lack of target and thus signaling specificity. In the current
study, we explored ligand design for the melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4R)
since it is an attractive target for developing antiobesity drugs.
Endogenously, the receptor is activated by peptide ligands, i.e.,
three melanocyte-stimulating hormones (α-MSH, β-MSH, and
γ-MSH) and by adrenocorticotropic hormone. Therefore, we utilized
a peptide drug design approach, utilizing “molecular grafting”
of pharmacophore peptide sequence motifs onto a stable nature-derived
peptide scaffold. Specifically, protegrin-4-like-peptide-1 (Pr4LP1)
and arenicin-1-like-peptide-1 (Ar3LP1) fully activated MC4R in a functional
cAMP assay with potencies of 3.7 and 1.0 nM, respectively. In a nanoluciferase
complementation assay with less signal amplification, the designed
peptides fully recruited mini-Gs with subnanomolar and nanomolar potencies.
Interestingly, these novel peptide MC4R ligands recruited β-arrestin-2
with ∼2-fold greater efficacies and ∼20-fold increased
potencies as compared to the endogenous α-MSH. The peptides
were inactive at related MC1R and MC3R in a cAMP accumulation assay.
These findings highlight the applicability of animal-derived disulfide-rich
scaffolds to design pathway and subtype selective MC4R pharmacological
probes. In the future, this approach could be exploited to develop
functionally selective ligands that could offer safer and more effective
obesity drugs.