4.7 Article

From a Cone Snail Toxin to a Competitive MC4R Antagonist

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 65, Issue 18, Pages 12084-12094

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.2c00786

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European FP7 project [278346 2011-2015]
  2. University of Paris-Sud
  3. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec en Sante (FQR-S)
  4. Canadian Institute for Health Research CIHR [FDN-148431]

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The melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4R) plays a crucial role in energy balance, and a cone snail toxin, N-CTX-Ltg1a, has been identified to have nanomolar affinity for MC4R, providing potential for the development of new MC4R antagonists.
The melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4R) plays a role in energy homeostasis and represents a target for treating energy balance disorders. For decades, synthetic ligands have been derived from MC4R endogenous agonists and antagonists, such as setmelanotide used to treat rare forms of genetic obesity. Recently, animal venoms have demonstrated their capacity to provide melanocortin ligands with toxins from a scorpion and a spider. Here, we described a cone snail toxin, N-CTX-Ltg1a, with a nanomolar affinity for hMC4R but unrelated to any known toxins or melanocortin ligands. We then derived from the conotoxin the linear peptide HT1-0, a competitive antagonist of G(s), G(15), and beta-arrestin2 pathways with a low nanomolar affinity for hMC4R. Similar to endogenous ligands, HT1-0 needs hydrophobic and basic residues to bind hMC4R. Altogether, it represents the first venom-derived peptide of high affinity on MC4R and paves the way for the development of new MC4R antagonists.

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