학술논문

Bioactive N-terminal undecapeptides derived from parathyroid hormone: the role of α-helicity
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
The Journal of Peptide Research. Jan 01, 2005 65(1):23-35
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
1397-002X
Abstract
The N-terminal 1–34 segment of parathyroid hormone (PTH) is fully active in vitro and in vivo and it can reproduce all biological responses in bone characteristic of the native intact PTH. Recent studies have demonstrated that N-terminal fragments presenting the principal activating domain such as PTH(1–11) and PTH(1–14) with helicity-enhancing substitutions yield potent analogues with PTH(1–34)-like activity. To further investigate the role of α-helicity on biological potency, we designed and synthesized by solid-phase methodology the following hPTH(1–11) analogues substituted at positions 1 and/or 3 by the sterically hindered and helix-promoting C-tetrasubstituted α-amino acids α-amino isobutyric acid (Aib), 1-aminocyclopentane-1-carboxylic acid (Ac5c) and 1-aminocyclohexane-1-carboxylic acid (Ac6c): Ac5c-V-Aib-E-I-Q-L-M-H-Q-R-NH2 (I); Aib-V-Ac5c-E-I-Q-L-M-H-Q-R-NH2 (II); Ac6c-V-Aib-E-I-Q-L-M-H-Q-R-NH2 (III); Aib-V-Ac6c-E-I-Q-L-M-H-Q-R-NH2 (IV); Aib-V-Aib-E-I-Q-L-M-H-Q-R-NH2 (V); S-V-Aib-E-I-Q-L-M-H-Q-R-NH2 (VI), S-V-Ac5c-E-I-Q-L-M-H-Q-R-NH2 (VII); Ac5c-V-S-E-I-Q-L-M-H-Q-R-NH2 (VIII); Ac6c-V-S-E-I-Q-L-M-H-Q-R-NH2 (IX); Ac5c-V-Ac5c-E-I-Q-L-M-H-Q-R-NH2 (X); Ac6c-V-Ac6c-E-I-Q-L-M-H-Q-R-NH2 (XI). All analogues were biologically evaluated and conformationally characterized in 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE) solution by circular dichroism (CD). Analogues I–V, which cover the full range of biological activity observed in the present study, were further conformationally characterized in detail by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and computer simulations studies. The results of ligand-stimulated cAMP accumulation experiments indicated that analogues I and II are active, analogues III, VI and VII are very weakly active and analogues IV, V, VIII–XI are inactive. The most potent analogue, I exhibits biological activity 3500-fold higher than that of the native PTH(1–11) and only 15-fold weaker than that of the native sequence hPTH(1–34). Remarkably, the two most potent analogues, I and II, and the very weakly active analogues, VI and VII, exhibit similar helix contents. These results indicate that the presence of a stable N-terminal helical sequence is an important but not sufficient condition for biological activity.