Abstract

The aggregation of insulin into amyloid fibers has been a limiting factor in the development of fast acting insulin analogues, creating a demand for excipients that limit aggregation. Despite the potential demand, inhibitors specifically targeting insulin have been few in number. Here we report a non-toxic and serum stable-designed heptapeptide, KR7 (KPWWPRR-NH2), that differs significantly from the primarily hydrophobic sequences that have been previously used to interfere with insulin amyloid fibrillation. Thioflavin T fluorescence assays, circular dichroism spectroscopy, and one-dimensional proton NMR experiments suggest KR7 primarily targets the fiber elongation step with little effect on the early oligomerization steps in the lag time period. From confocal fluorescence and atomic force microscopy experiments, the net result appears to be the arrest of aggregation in an early, non-fibrillar aggregation stage. This mechanism is noticeably different from previous peptide-based inhibitors, which have primarily shifted the lag time with little effect on later stages of aggregation. As insulin is an important model system for understanding protein aggregation, the new peptide may be an important tool for understanding peptide-based inhibition of amyloid formation.

Highlights

  • The aggregation of insulin into amyloid fibers has been a limiting factor in the development of fast acting insulin analogues, creating a demand for excipients that limit aggregation

  • Amyloidogenesis is a major concern during insulin manufacture, as insulin in the amyloid form is not bioavailable, and any degree of amyloid formation leads to reduced efficacy of insulin administration [5]

  • It was reported that tripeptides WWW, WPW, WWP, and PWW bind to amyloid fibrils of A␤9–40 at the hydrophobic groove with very high affinity

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Summary

Inhibition of Insulin Amyloid Fibrillation by a Novel Amphipathic Heptapeptide

Mandal¶, and Anirban Bhunia‡4 From the ‡Department of Biophysics and ¶Department of Molecular Medicine, Bose Institute, P-1/12 CIT Scheme VII (M), Kolkata 700054, India, §Radiation Biology Branch, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20814, ʈTIFR Centre for Interdisciplinary Sciences (TCIS), Narsingi, Hyderabad 500075, India, and **Department of Chemistry, 93/1 APC Road, Bose Institute, Kolkata 700009, India

Edited by Jeffrey Pessin
Peptide Design
Fibrillation Kinetics of Insulin
Epitope Mapping
Experimental Procedures
Molecular Modeling
Cell Culture and MTT Assay
Full Text
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