Abstract

By site-directed mutagenesis, six insulin residues related to the insulin-receptor interaction were grafted, partially or fully, onto the corresponding position of a recombinant amphioxus insulin-like peptide (ILP) that contained the A- and B-domains of the deduced amphioxus ILP. After fermentation, purification, and enzymatic cleavage, six insulin-like double-chain ILP analogues were obtained: [A2Ile]ILP, [B12Val, B16Tyr]ILP, [B25Phe]ILP, [A2Ile, B12Val, B16Tyr, B25Phe]ILP (four-mutated ILP), [A2Ile, B12Val, B16Tyr, B24Phe, B25Phe]ILP (five-mutated ILP), and [A2Ile, B12Val, B16Tyr, B24Phe, B25Phe, B26Tyr]ILP (six-mutated ILP). Circular dichroism analysis showed that such replacement did not significantly affect their secondary and tertiary structure compared with that of the wild-type ILP. The insulin-receptor-binding activity of the four-, five-, and six-mutated ILP was 0.14%, 11%, and 11% of native insulin, respectively; the other three ILP analogues acquired none of the detectable insulin-receptor-binding potency. The growth-promoting activities of the five- and six-mutated ILP were both about 50% of native insulin, while that of the wild-type ILP was not detectable. By structure-function-based mutagenesis, the completely inactive amphioxus ILP was converted into a molecule with moderate mammalian insulin activity. These results indicated the following: first, the grafted as well as those inborn insulin-receptor-binding related residues can form an insulin-receptor-binding patch on the ILP analogues; second, the ILP can be used as a scaffold molecule to investigate the role of the insulin residues; third, the natural evolution of amphioxus ILP to mammalian insulin is a possible process and can be mimicked in the laboratory.

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