Abstract

Bifunctional fusion protein design has been widely utilized as a strategy to increase the efficacy of protein therapeutics. Previously, we proposed a novel application of the bifunctional fusion protein design through the introduction of proinsulin-transferrin (ProINS-Tf) fusion protein as a liver-specific protein prodrug to achieve a glucose-lowering effect in type 1 diabetic mice. In this report, we studied the binding characteristics of this activated fusion protein to the insulin receptor to elucidate its mechanism in eliciting insulin receptor-mediated signaling. We found that, with the assistance of the transferrin moiety binding to the transferrin receptor, the activated ProINS-Tf exhibited significantly higher binding affinity to the insulin receptor compared with the native insulin, resulting in a prolonged and stronger Akt phosphorylation. This enhanced induction by activated ProINS-Tf overcame insulin resistance in palmitate-treated HepG2 cells. ProINS-Tf also demonstrated a better glucose-lowering effect than native insulin, even with a much lower dose and less frequent injections, in non-obese diabetic mice with insulin resistance symptoms. The activated ProINS-Tf, serving as a bivalent protein molecule, could be a new insulin analog to overcome insulin resistance, which is associated with several diseases, including type 2 diabetes and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

Highlights

  • Bifunctional fusion protein design has been widely utilized as a strategy to increase the efficacy of protein therapeutics

  • To induce INS resistance www.nature.com/scientificreports in HepG2 cells, cells were treated in Bovine serum albumin (BSA)/palmitate complex diluted in serum-free Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium (DMEM) for 16–18 h and utilized for Akt phosphorylation assays

  • Relative INS receptor (IR) binding affinities were measured for both INS and ProINS-Tf on HepG2 cell monolayers

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Summary

Introduction

Bifunctional fusion protein design has been widely utilized as a strategy to increase the efficacy of protein therapeutics. To induce INS resistance www.nature.com/scientificreports in HepG2 cells, cells were treated in BSA/palmitate complex diluted in serum-free DMEM for 16–18 h and utilized for Akt phosphorylation assays.

Results
Conclusion
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