1. Academic Validation
  2. Apelin-36 Modulates Blood Glucose and Body Weight Independently of Canonical APJ Receptor Signaling

Apelin-36 Modulates Blood Glucose and Body Weight Independently of Canonical APJ Receptor Signaling

  • J Biol Chem. 2017 Feb 3;292(5):1925-1933. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M116.748103.
Hadas Galon-Tilleman 1 Hong Yang 1 Maria A Bednarek 2 Sandra M Spurlock 1 Kevin J Paavola 1 Brian Ko 1 Carmen To 1 Jian Luo 1 Hui Tian 1 Lutz Jermutus 2 Joseph Grimsby 3 Cristina M Rondinone 3 Anish Konkar 3 Daniel D Kaplan 4
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 From NGM Biopharmaceuticals, South San Francisco, California 94080.
  • 2 the Department of Antibody Discovery and Protein Engineering, MedImmune Ltd., Cambridge CB21 6GH, United Kingdom.
  • 3 the Department of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Disease Research, MedImmune LLC, Gaithersburg, Maryland 20878.
  • 4 From NGM Biopharmaceuticals, South San Francisco, California 94080. Electronic address: [email protected].
Abstract

Apelin-36 was discovered as the endogenous ligand for the previously orphan receptor APJ. Apelin-36 has been linked to two major types of biological activities: cardiovascular (stimulation of cardiac contractility and suppression of blood pressure) and metabolic (improving glucose homeostasis and lowering body weight). It has been assumed that both of these activities are modulated through APJ. Here, we demonstrate that the metabolic activity of apelin-36 can be separated from canonical APJ activation. We developed a series of apelin-36 variants in which evolutionarily conserved residues were mutated, and evaluated their ability to modulate glucose homeostasis and body weight in chronic mouse models. We found that apelin-36(L28A) retains full metabolic activity, but is 100-fold impaired in its ability to activate APJ. In contrast to its full metabolic activity, apelin-36(L28A) lost the ability to suppress blood pressure in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). We took advantage of these findings to develop a longer-acting variant of apelin-36 that could modulate glucose homeostasis without impacting blood pressure (or activating APJ). Apelin-36-[L28C(30kDa-PEG)] is 10,000-fold less potent than apelin-36 at activating the APJ receptor but retains its ability to significantly lower blood glucose and improve glucose tolerance in diet-induced obese mice. Apelin-36-[L28C(30kDa-PEG)] provides a starting point for the development of diabetes therapeutics that are devoid of the blood pressure effects associated with canonical APJ activation.

Keywords

APJ; G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR); apelin; cardiovascular; diabetes; ligand-receptor promiscuity; metabolic syndrome; obesity; signal transduction.

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