4.3 Article

Rescue of defective MC4R cell-surface expression and signaling by a novel pharmacoperone Ipsen 17

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 1, Pages 17-29

Publisher

BIOSCIENTIFICA LTD
DOI: 10.1530/JME-14-0005

Keywords

melanocortin 4 receptor; pharmacological chaperone; severe early-onset morbid obesity; functional rescue

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin City [13JCYBJC41900]
  2. Tianjin University of Science and Technology, China [20130420]
  3. International Cooperation Project [2013DFA31160]
  4. Innovative Team Project [IRT1166]
  5. Obesita and Algaegen LLC, USA

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Melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4R) is a key factor in regulating energy homeostasis, and null mutations occurring in the gene encoding MC4R cause severe early-onset morbid obesity in humans. Many obesity-causing mutations affecting MC4R clinically identified so far lead to failure of mutant receptors to shuttle to the plasma membrane. In this study, we show that a novel human MC4R antagonist, Ipsen 17, acted as an pharmacological chaperone of human MCR4. As tested with 12 obesity-causing human MC4R variants including S58C, E61K, N62S, I69T, P78L, C84R, G98R, T162I, R165W, W174C, C271Y, and P299H, Ipsen 17 was found to be the most universal pharmacological chaperone of MC4R reported so far because it can completely rescue nearly all mutant receptors (except P299H) with the highest potency (an EC50 value of approximately 10(-8) M) and efficiency when compared with results for other tested pharmacological chaperones of MC4R including ML00253764, PBA, MTHP, PPPone, MPCI, DCPMP, and NBP described in the literature. Once restored to the plasma membrane, defective human MC4R variants responded to alpha-MSH stimulation with an EC50 value of approximately 10(-8) M and displayed dramatically enhanced signaling ability (except for G98R) in a mutant-specific efficacy and potency profile. Taken together, these results indicate that Ipsen 17 represents a candidate for the development of a targeted treatment of severe early-onset morbid obesity caused by a large subset of inherited mutations in the human MC4R gene.

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