posted on 2023-04-06, 17:35authored byMengjie Liu, Qingyang Li, Carlie Delaine, Hongkang Wu, Yanni Arsenakis, Barbara F. White, Briony E. Forbes, Chaitra Chandrashekar, Mohammed Akhter Hossain
Commercially available insulins are manufactured by recombinant
methods for the treatment of diabetes. Long-acting insulin drugs (e.g.,
detemir and degludec) are obtained by fatty acid conjugation at LysB29
ε-amine of insulin via acid–amide coupling. There are
three amine groups in insulin, and they all react with fatty acids
in alkaline conditions. Due to the lack of selectivity, such conjugation
reactions produce non-desired byproducts. We designed and chemically
synthesized a novel thiol-insulin scaffold (CysB29-insulin II), by replacing the LysB29 residue in insulin
with the CysB29 residue. Then, we conjugated a fatty acid
moiety (palmitic acid, C16) to CysB29-insulin II by a highly efficient and selective thiol–maleimide conjugation
reaction. We obtained the target peptide (palmitoyl-insulin) rapidly
within 5 min without significant byproducts. The palmitoyl-insulin
is shown to be structurally similar to insulin and biologically active
both in vitro and in vivo. Importantly, unlike native insulin, palmitoyl-insulin
is slow and long-acting.