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Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development, L.L.C., San Diego, California
Received August 30, 2004; accepted September 30, 2004
| Abstract |
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In this report, we describe the creation of chimeric peptides consisting of relaxin-3 B-chain and A-chains from different members of the relaxin/insulin family and demonstrate that a chimeric peptide consisting of the relaxin-3 B-chain and the INSL5 A-chain is a selective, specific, and potent agonist for GPCR135 and GPCR142 but not for LGR7 and LGR8. Thus, this chimeric peptide is useful as a pharmacological tool for in vivo study of the central function of GPCR135, particularly in rat, in which GPCR142 is a pseudogene. In addition, the relaxin-3/INSL5 chimeric peptide is much more hydrophilic than relaxin-3, thus when labeled with iodine, it binds to the GPCR135- or GPCR142-expressing cells with a high signal-to-noise ratio. Therefore, this new peptide is a suitable tool for receptor autoradiography.
| Materials and Methods |
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-D-Galactopyranoside (CRGP) was purchased from Roche Diagnostics (Mannheim, Germany). African green monkey cell line COS-7 and human embryonic kidney cell line 293 were purchased from American Type Culture Collection (Manassas, VA). All cell culture reagents were purchased from Invitrogen (Carlsbad, CA). Iodine-125 radionuclide was purchased from PerkinElmer Life and Analytical Sciences (Boston, MA). Recombinant human relaxin-3 and 125I-relaxin-3 were prepared as reported previously (Liu et al., 2003b
Construction of Chimeric Peptide Expression Constructs. A series of chimeric peptides were prepared by creating gene cassettes that consisted of coding regions for an alpha peptide signal peptide, a FLAG tag, the human relaxin-3 B-chain, the human relaxin-3 C-chain, and an A-chain from one of the following: relaxin-1 (Hudson et al., 1983
), relaxin-2 (Hudson et al., 1984
), INSL3 (Adham et al., 1993
), INSL4 (Koman et al., 1996
), INSL5 (Conklin et al., 1999
), INSL6 (Lok et al., 2000
), insulin, or an artificial A-chain, in which only the Cys residues remain unchanged, whereas all the other amino acids residues were randomly assigned. The chimeric peptide coding regions were PCR amplified from the human relaxin-3 expression vector (Liu et al., 2003b
) as described below.
PCR Amplification of the Coding Regions for the Chimeric Peptides. Relaxin-3/Relaxin-1 (R3/R1) chimeric peptide consists of relaxin-3 B-chain and the relaxin-1 A-chain. The DNA coding region for this chimeric peptide was PCR-amplified using modified human relaxin-3 expression vector relaxin-3 RR (Liu et al., 2003) as template and using primers P1 and P2. Relaxin-3/Relaxin-2 (R3/R2) chimeric peptide DNA coding region was PCR-amplified using modified human relaxin-3 expression vector Relaxin-3 RR as template and using primers P1 and P4. Relaxin-3/INSL3 (R3/I3) chimeric peptide DNA coding region was PCR-amplified using modified human relaxin-3 expression vector Relaxin-3 RR as template and using primers P1 and P3. Relaxin-3/INSL4 (R3/I4) chimeric peptide DNA coding region was PCR amplified using modified human relaxin-3 expression vector Relaxin-3 RR as template and using primers P1 and P5. Relaxin-3/INSL5 (R3/I5) chimeric peptide DNA coding region was PCR-amplified using modified human relaxin-3 expression vector Relaxin-3 RR as template and using primers P1 and P6. Relaxin-3/INSL6 (R3/I6) chimeric peptide DNA coding region was PCR-amplified using modified human relaxin-3 expression vector Relaxin-3 RR as template and using primers P1 and P7. Relaxin-3/Insulin (R3/I) chimeric peptide DNA coding region was PCR-amplified using modified human relaxin-3 expression vector Relaxin-3 RR as template and using primers P1 and P8. Relaxin-3/artificial A-chain (R3/A) chimeric peptide DNA coding region was PCR-amplified using modified human relaxin-3 expression vector Relaxin-3 RR as template and using primers P1 and P9. All primer sequences are given in Table 1.
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Construction of the Expression Vectors for Relaxin-3 Chimeric Peptides. The PCR products for relaxin-3 chimeric peptides coding regions were digested with DNA restriction enzymes PstI and BamHI and cloned into a mammalian expression vector pCMV sport1 (Invitrogen) between PstI and BamHI sites. The insert region for each construct was sequenced to confirm the sequence identity.
Expression and Purification of Chimeric Peptides. Different relaxin-3 chimera expression constructs were cotransfected with a human furin expression plasmid (Liu et al., 2003b
) into COS-7 cells. Three days after transfection, the cell culture media were collected and run through an anti-FLAG affinity column (Sigma-Aldrich). The affinity-purified peptides were cleaved with enterokinase (Novagen, Madison, WI) to remove the N-terminal FLAG tag. The untagged chimeras were further purified by HPLC with a C18 column. Because the N-terminal Gln residue in INSL5 A-chain is converted to a pyro-Glu (<E) (Liu et al., 2005
), the purified R3/I5 chimeric peptide was analyzed by N-terminal Edman degradation and mass spectrometry as described previously (Liu et al., 2003b
) to determined whether a Gln to pyro-Glu conversion also occurs in R3/I5 A-chain.
Preparation of Radioligands. Human relaxin-3 was labeled with 125I and Chloramine T (PerkinElmer Life and Analytical Sciences) as described previously (Liu et al., 2003b
). Likewise,INSL3, and R3/I5 chimeric peptide were labeled with 125I and Chloramine T. The labeled peptides were separated from the unlabeled peptides by HPLC using a C18 column. The freshly labeled peptides have a specific activity of 2200 Ci/mmol.
Molecular Cloning of LGR7 and LGR8. Human LGR7 cDNA containing the complete coding region was PCR-amplified from a human brain cDNA pool (BD Biosciences, Palo Alto, CA) using two primers [forward primer P10 and reverse primer P11 (Table 1)] designed according the published sequence (Hsu et al., 2000
, 2002
). Human LGR8 cDNA containing the complete coding region was PCR-amplified from a human testis cDNA pool (BD Biosciences) using two primers [forward primer P12 and reverse primer P13 (Table 1)] designed according to the published sequence (Hsu et al., 2002
). The resulting cDNAs were cloned into the mammalian expression vector pCIneo (Promega, Madison, WI), and the insert regions were sequenced to confirm the sequence identities for LGR7 and LGR8, respectively.
Radioligand Binding Assays for GPCR135, GPCR142, LGR7, and LGR8. Radioligand binding assays for GPCR135 and GPCR142 were performed as described previously (Liu et al., 2003a
,b
). In brief, embranes from COS-7 cells transiently expressing GPCR135 or GPCR142 were incubated with 125I-relaxin-3 at a final concentration 100 pM in 96-well plates. Peptides for competition binding studies were added to the binding mix (final volume 200 µl) in binding buffer (0 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 5 mM EDTA, 1% bovine serum albumin, 0.1% protease inhibitor cocktails; Sigma-Aldrich). The binding mixtures were incubated at room temperature for 1 h, filtered through GFC plates (PerkinElmer Life and Analytical Sciences) presaturated with 0.3% polyethylenimine (Sigma-Aldrich), and washed with cold washing buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 5 mM EDTA). Microscint-40 was added to each well, and the bound 125I-relaxin-3 was counted in a scintillation counter (TopCount/NTX; PerkinElmer Life and Analytical Sciences).
Radioligand binding assays for LGR7 and LGR8 were performed using live COS-7 cells transiently expressing LGR7 or LGR8. In brief, COS-7 cells were transiently transfected with LGR7 or LGR8 expression plasmids in 15-cm culture dishes using LipofectAMINE (Invitrogen). Two days after transfection, the transfected cells were detached from the 15-cm culture dishes using phosphate-buffered saline plus 10 mM EDTA, seeded into 96-well opaque poly-D-lysine-coated culture plates and used for radioligand binding assays. For LGR7, 125I-relaxin-3 was used as the tracer. For LGR8, 125I-INSL3 (specific activity 2200 Ci/mmol) was used as the tracer. 125I-labeled tracer was added in binding reactions at a final concentration of 100 pM in binding buffer containing Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium plus 50 mM HEPES and 1% bovine serum albumin. Different unlabeled peptides at various concentrations were added to the binding assays as the competitors. The binding mixtures were incubated at room temperature for 1 h. The unbound radioligand was removed by aspiration of the binding buffer. The cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline. The bound radioligand was counted in a scintillation counter (TopCount/NTX). The results were analyzed using Prism 3.0 program (GraphPad Software Inc., San Diego, CA). The IC50 values represent the ligand concentrations that inhibit 50% of the maximum specific binding. The affinity of 125I-relaxin-3 for LGR7 (Kd value) was determined using 125I-relaxin-3/LGR7 binding assay with increasing concentration of 125I-relaxin-3. Nonspecific binding was determined by performing the binding assay in the presence of 1 µM unlabeled relaxin-3. Likewise, the Kd value of 125I-INSL3 to LGR8 was determined using 125I-INSL3/LGR8 binding assay with increasing concentration of 125I-INSL3. Nonspecific binding was determined by performing the binding assay in the presence of 1 µM unlabeled INSL3.
Functional Characterization of GPCR135, GPCR142, LGR7, and LGR8 Using Chimeric Peptides. Activations of GPCR135, GPCR142, LGR7, and LGR8 were measured in SK-N-MC/
-gal cells (Liu et al., 2001
) stably expressing GPCR135, GPCR142, LGR7, or LGR8, respectively. SK-N-MC/
-gal cells harbor a
-galactosidase gene under control of cAMP-responsive element. An increase in intracellular cAMP concentration leads to increased
-galactosidase gene expression, whose activity can be measured using CPRG as the substrate. In brief, cells were seeded in 96-well tissue culture plate at a density of 30,000 cells/well in minimal essential medium plus 10% fetal serum, sodium pyruvate, penicillin, streptomycin, and G418 (400 mg/l). For cells expressing LGR7 or LGR8, intracellular cAMP was stimulated with different peptides at various concentrations. For cells expressing GPCR135 or GPCR142, forskolin was added to cells at a final concentration of 5 µM to stimulate intracellular cAMP accumulation. Different concentrations of ligands were added to the cells to inhibit the forskolin-induced cAMP accumulation. For all cells, after adding ligands, cells were incubated for six additional hours in 37°C incubator. The media were aspirated and the
-galactosidase activities, which represent the relative cAMP concentrations, were then measured as described previously (Liu et al., 2001
). The results were analyzed by Prism 3.0 software. The EC50 values represent the ligand concentrations that achieve 50% of the maximum inhibition of forskolin induced
-galactosidase activity (GPCR135 or GPCR142) or 50% of the maximum ligand induced
-galactosidase activity (LGR7 or LGR8), respectively.
Receptor Autoradiography on Rat Brain Sections. All the experiments described in this study have been carried out in accordance with the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals as adopted and promulgated by the National Institutes of Health. Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats (150200 g) were asphyxiated by carbon dioxide inhalation. Rat brains were immediately removed from the skull and rapidly frozen in dry ice. Thick sagittal sections (20 µm) were cut using a Cryostat-microtome (Microm HM505E; Mikron, San Diego, CA) and thaw-mounted on adhesive microscope slides (Superfrost+ Plus; VWR, West Chester, PA). The sections were kept at -70°C until use. Sections were thawed and dried under a cold airstream and then preincubated for 15 min at room temperature in incubation buffer (20 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 120 mM NaCl2, 0.22 mM KH2PO4, 1.3 mM CaCl2, 0.8 mM MgSO4) by immersing sections in a 400-ml jar. Sections were dried again under a cold airstream and incubated for 60 min with 7 pM 125I-relaxin-3 (specific activity 2200 Ci/mmol) or 125I-R3/I5 (specific activity 2200 Ci/mmol) in incubation buffer containing 0.5% bovine serum albumin and protease inhibitor cocktail (Sigma-Aldrich). Nonspecific binding was determined in the presence of 100 nM unlabeled human relaxin-3. After incubation, the excess radioligand was washed off by immersing the slides in the jar containing incubation buffer at 4°C (3 times 10 min) followed by a quick immersion in water. Sections were dried and exposed to Fuji-film Imaging plates (BAS-MS 2025) for 48 h. The imaging plates were scanned using the Fuji Bio-Imaging Analyzer System (BAS-5000) and visualized using ImageGauge version 3.12 software.
| Results |
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-galactosidase activity in SK-N-MC/
-gal cells expressing GPCR135 (with an EC50 value of 88 nM; Fig. 1A) or GPCR142 (with an EC50 value of 125 nM; Fig. 1B) in dose-dependent manner, which is consistent with our previous reports (Liu et al., 2003a
-galactosidase activity in LGR7-expressing cells (with EC50 values of 0.25 and 2.1 nM, respectively; Fig. 1C), and porcine relaxin and human INSL3 induced
-galactosidase activity in LGR8-expressing cells (with EC50 values of 1.5 and 0.16 nM, respectively; Fig. 1D).
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Expression and Purification of Relaxin-3 Chimeras. Different relaxin-3 chimera expression DNA constructs encoding peptides with the B-chain from relaxin-3 and an A-chain from different members of the insulin/relaxin family were constructed similarly to that of the recombinant expression of the wild type relaxin-3 (Liu et al., 2003b
). Each construct contains the coding regions for a signal peptide for secretion, a FLAG tag for affinity purification, the B-chain and the C-chain of relaxin-3, and an A-chain from one of other members of the insulin/relaxin family, including relaxin-1 (R3/R1), relaxin-2 (R3/R2), INSL3 (R3/I3), INSL4 (R3/I4), INSL5 (R3/I5), INSL6 (R3/I6), and insulin (R3/I). In addition, a chimera (R3/A) construct encoding an A-chain with the conserved cystines and arbitrarily assigned amino acids at the other positions was also created. The junction of the C-chain and the A-chain for each construct contains an artificial furin cleavage site (RGRR) for efficient in vivo cleavage when coexpressed with furin (Hosaka et al., 1991
; Liu et al., 2003b
). The predicted B-chain and A-chain sequences for different chimeras are shown in Fig. 2. The expression constructs for the different relaxin-3 chimeras were coexpressed with furin in COS-7 cells. The recombinant peptides secreted into the conditioned medium of transfected cells were affinity purified with an anti-FLAG affinity column, cleaved with enterokinase to remove the N-terminal FLAG tag, and then further purified by reversed phase HPLC. The purified peptides were characterized by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nonreducing conditions to verify the purity. The protein expression levels for R3/R2,R3/I3,R3/I5, and R3/I6 were comparable with the production of relaxin-3 wild-type peptides (Liu et al., 2003b
), which was about 1 mg/l. The production levels of R3/R1 and R3/I4 were lower at approximately 200 mg/l. Attempts to make R3/I and R3/A chimeras resulted in no detectable peptides, when analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (data not shown). The N-terminal Gln of INSL5 A-chain is converted to a pyro-Glu residue (Liu et al., 2005
). To investigate whether this conversion also occurs in R3/I5 chimera, purified R3/I5 peptide was analyzed by Edman degradation and mass spectrometry. The Edman degradation resulted in only one sequence (RAA-PYGV), which matches the B-chain sequence of R3/I5, suggesting the N terminus of the A-chain is blocked from Edman degradation. Mass spectrometry showed that the chimeric peptide has a molecular mass of 5240 Da, which matches the predicted molecular mass of R3/I5 with the Gln to pyro-Glu conversion and is 17 Da smaller than the predicted molecular mass (5257 Da) of R3/I5 without the Gln to pyro-Glu conversion, indicating that the N-terminal Gln of R3/I5 A-chain is converted to a pyro-Glu.
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Pharmacological Characterization of Relaxin-3 Chimeric Peptides by Radioligand Binding. The different chimeric peptides were tested as ligands for GPCR135 (Fig. 3A), GPCR142 (Fig. 3B), LGR7 (Fig. 3C), and LGR8 (Fig. 3D) in radioligand binding assays to evaluate their receptor binding properties. 125I-Relaxin-3 was used as the tracer to characterize the chimeras for their receptor binding properties for GPCR135, GPCR142, and LGR7. For LGR8, 125I-INSL3 was used as the radioligand. The Ki values of different chimeras for GPCR135, GPCR142, LGR7, and LGR8 are listed in Table 2. Our results show that all chimeras, except R3/I4, bind both GPCR135 and GPCR142 with high affinity with slight differences in potency. R3/I4 only demonstrated some marginal binding for both GPCR135 and GPCR142 at the highest concentration (1 µM). Chimeras R3/R1, R3/R2, and R3/I3 bind to LGR7 with high affinity, with Ki values in low nanomolar range, which is similar to that of relaxin-3. R3/I6 binds LGR7 with slightly lower affinity with a Ki value of 12 nM. It is interesting that R3/I5, which demonstrated high affinity for GPCR135 and GPCR142, showed very low affinity for LGR7 with a Ki value of about 0.5 µM. R3/I4 is totally inactive for LGR7 even at the highest concentration (1 µM) tested. None of the chimeras bind LGR8 with high affinity. R3/I4, R3/I5, R3/I6 showed no binding affinity for LGR8, whereas chimeras R3/R1, R3/R2, and R3/I3 each demonstrated modest binding affinity for LGR8.
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Pharmacological Characterization of Relaxin-3 Chimeric Peptides in Functional Assays. We tested the different chimeric peptides for their ability to inhibit forskolin-induced
-gal expression in SK-N-MC/
-gal cells stably expressing GPCR135 (Fig. 4A) or GPCR142 (Fig. 4B). The EC50 values of different chimeras to activate GPCR135 or GRPCR142 are listed in Table 3. Our results demonstrated that all chimeras tested act as agonists for both GPCR135 and GPCR142. Chimeras including R3/R1, R3/R2, R3/I3, and R3/I5 have similar potency compared with that of the wild-type relaxin-3 with EC50 values in the low nanomolar range. Chimera R3/I6 is slightly less potent for both GPCR135 and GPCR142 with EC50 values around 10 nM. R3/I4 only stimulated GPCR135 or GPCR142 at the highest concentration (1 µM) tested. Relaxin-3 chimeras were also tested for their agonist activity for LGR7 and LGR8 in the SK-N-MC/
-gal cells expressing LGR7 (Fig. 4C) or LGR8 (Fig. 4D). The EC50 values of the different chimeras to activate LGR7 or LGR8 are also listed in Table 3. Our results indicated that R3/R1, R3/R2, and R3/I3 have high potency with EC50 values around 1 to 2 nM for LGR7. R3/I6 has slightly lower potency for LGR7 with an EC50 value of 13.7 nM. R3/I5, a potent agonist for GPCR135 and GPCR142, demonstrated very low potency for LGR7 (with an EC50 value of
400 nM). For LGR8, R3/R1 demonstrated some marginal activity at the highest concentration tested (1 µM). R3/R2 and R3/I3 showed slightly higher potency with EC50 values of about 600 and 300 nM, respectively. Other chimeras showed no activity for LGR8. Control SK-N-MC/
-gal cells without expressing recombinant GPCR135, GPCR142, LGR7, or LGR8 did not respond to any peptides (data not shown).
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R3/I5 Binds to GPCR135-Expressing Cells with Low Nonspecific Binding. Relaxin-3 is a very hydrophobic peptide. When labeled with 125I and applied to receptor binding, 125I-relaxin-3 generates high nonspecific binding. When used as radioligand, 125I-relaxin-3 still produces reasonably good signal-to-noise ratios for cells expressing recombinant GPCR135, GPCR142, and LGR7 because in the recombinant system, the receptor expression level is very high. However, the high nonspecific binding creates a big obstacle for radioligand autoradiographic studies, in which the endogenous receptors, normally expressed at much lower levels compared with the recombinant receptors, are studied. By creating the relaxin-3 chimera R3/I5, we replaced the native A-chain of relaxin-3, which is very hydrophobic, with the INSL5 A-chain, which is much more hydrophilic, thus increasing the overall hydrophilicity of the peptide. We labeled R3/I5 chimera with 125I and characterized its receptor binding properties for recombinant GPCR135 and LGR7. In addition, we compared the results of radioligand autoradiography on rat brain slide using either 125I-relaxin-3 or 125I-R3/I5 as the radioligand. Our results showed that although both 125I-relaxin-3 (Fig. 5A) and 125I-R3/I5 (Fig. 5B) bind to GPCR135 expressing cells with high affinity, 125I-R3/I5 produces much lower nonspecific binding than 125I-relaxin-3. In addition, 125I-R3/I5 did not demonstrate significant binding to LGR7, whereas 125I-relaxin-3 was bound with high affinity (Figs. 3A and 5A). When 125I-relaxin-3 was used as the radioligand on rat brain sections, virtually no difference between total binding and nonspecific binding (determined in the presence of 100 nM of unlabeled relaxin-3) was observed (Fig. 5C). In contrast, when 125I-R3/I5 was used as the radioligand, the nonspecific binding was dramatically reduced (Fig. 5D). GPCR135-like binding sites were clearly observed in cortex, olfactory bulb, and superior colliculus areas (Fig. 5D).
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| Discussion |
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Chimeric Peptide R3/I5 Is a Suitable Tool for in Vivo Functional Studies and Receptor Autoradiography Studies of GPCR135. GPCR135 is predominantly expressed in the brain. In vivo administration of relaxin-3 in the brain to activate GPCR135 is a useful means to understand the physiological role of GPCR135. However it could be potentially confounded by the activation of LGR7, which is also expressed in the brain (Tan et al., 1999
; Hsu et al., 2000
, 2002
). Selective ligands that specifically activate GPCR135 but not LGR7 are highly desirable to study the in vivo function of GPCR135. Therefore, our creation of the relaxin-3 chimeric peptide R3/I5, a peptide that has very high affinity for GPCR135 (Ki of
0.5 nM) but very low affinity for LGR7 (Ki > 0.5 µM), will greatly assist the in vivo functional study of GPCR135, particularly in rat, which does not have GPCR142.
Radioligand autoradiography is an important and useful tool to study the receptor protein in vivo distribution, which can be used to predict the potential function of the receptor and guide in vivo studies. The GPCR135 binding sites in the brain have not been studied. Attempts to use 125I-relaxin-3 as radioligand in rat brain section autoradiography have not been successful. In addition to the fact that 125I-relaxin-3 also labels LGR7, 125I-relaxin-3 is very hydrophobic and produces a very high background when applied in the radioligand autoradiography studies. Addition of the INSL5 A-chain to the B-chain of relaxin-3 resulted in a molecule that had two desirable properties. First, it is selective for GPCR135. Second, it has reduced hydrophobicity, which resulted in 5- to 10-fold lower nonspecific binding. Direct application of 125I-R3/I5 to rat brain sections in radioligand autoradiography clearly showed specific binding sites. Because125I-R3/I5 applied in trace concentrations practically does not bind LGR7, 125I-R3/I5 is a very useful tool to selectively study GPCR135 receptor autoradiography in the rat brain, which has no GPCR142.
The Chimeric Peptide Studies Shed Light on the Molecular Structure of the Insulin/Relaxin-Related Peptides. Chimeric peptides R3/R1,R3/R2,R3/I3,R3/I4,R3/I5, and R3/I6 were successfully produced in our mammalian expression system, whereas R3/I and R3/A were not, indicating that the A-chains from many members of the insulin/relaxin family, although bearing limited sequence conservation, are interchangeable for protein folding, secretion, and stability maintenance. The failure to produce R3/I and R3/A suggests that certain structural requirements have to be met; thus, a compatible A-chain has to pair with the relaxin-3 B-chain. In an effort to understand the successful pairing of the relaxin-3 B-chain with the A-chains from relaxin, INSL3, INSL4, INSL5, or INSL6, but not the A-chain from insulin, we compared the amino acid sequence of all known members in the family (Fig. 6). Amino acid sequence comparison indicates that except for insulin, IGF1 and IGF2, the B-chains from all other members of the family have two conserved positively charged amino acids (Arg or Lys) corresponding to the Arg8 and Arg16 of the relaxin-3 B-chain. It is possible that relaxin, INSL3, INSL4, INSL5, INSL6, and relaxin-3 have a similar B-chain/A-chain pairing mechanism that is significantly different from that in insulin and IGFs.
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The Receptors for INSL4 May Be Distinct from GPCR135, GPCR142, LGR7, and LGR8, Whereas the Receptor for INSL6 May Be a Close Neighbor of LGR7 and LGR8. Our results indicate that chimeras including R3/R1, R3/R2, and R3/I3 have almost identical agonist properties compared with that of relaxin-3 wild-type peptide in terms of their ligand activity at GPCR135, GPCR142, and LGR7. The relaxin-3 B-chain alone is sufficient to activate GPCR135 and GPCR142, suggesting that the B-chain of relaxin-3 may have the necessary amino acid residues that directly interact with GPCR135 or GPCR142. With the addition of A-chain from other members of the family, we anticipated that some of the chimeric peptides would have high affinity for GPCR135 and GPCR142. Becauserelaxin-1, relaxin-2, relaxin-3, and INSL3 are natural ligands for either LGR7 (Hsu et al., 2002
; Sudo et al., 2003
), LGR8 (Kumagai et al., 2002
; Bogatcheva et al., 2003
), or both (Hsu et al., 2002
), it is not surprising to see that R3/R1, R3/R2, and R3/I3 display a very similar pharmacological profile to relaxin-3 (i.e., potent ligands for GPCR135, GPCR142, and LGR7). It is worth noting that although relaxin-3 is not a ligand for LGR8 (Sudo et al., 2003
), R3/R1, R3/R2, and R3/I3 have demonstrated ligand activities for LGR8, albeit with very low potency. Because those chimeras have A-chains from the natural ligands of LGR8, it is possible that the A-chains in those chimeras interact with and stimulate LGR8. Because the B-chains of relaxin and INSL3 also play important roles in the ligand receptor interaction (Bullesbach et al., 1992
; Bullesbach and Schwabe, 1999
, 2000
; Tan et al., 2002
), our results strongly suggest that LGR7 and LGR8 interact with both the B-chain and A-chain of their ligands. In addition, our results demonstrated a trend that chimeras with relaxin-3 B-chain and an A-chain from a natural ligand for LGR7 or LGR8 tend to have higher affinity for LGR7 and/or be active for LGR8. On the other hand, relaxin-3 chimeric peptides with A-chains from family members that are not ligands for LGR7 or LGR8 have lower or no affinity for LGR7 or LGR8; however, they may still retain high affinity for GPCR135 and GPCR142. INSL5 is not a ligand for LGR7 or LGR8 (Liu et al., 2003b
, 2005
). R3/I5 retains very high affinity for GPCR135/GPCR142 but displays very low affinity for LGR7 and is totally inactive at LGR8. Chimeric peptide R3/I6 has demonstrated reasonably high affinity (EC50
10 nM) for GPCR135/GPCR142, and LGR7, but it is totally inactive for LGR8, suggesting that the cognate receptor for INSL6 may be a close neighbor of LGR7; however, it may not be LGR8. Chimeric peptide R3/I4 has no activity for LGR7 and LGR8, suggesting that INSL4 is not a ligand for LGR7 or LGR8. We expected that R3/I4 would retain a high affinity for GPCR135/GPCR142. What surprised us is that R3/I4 demonstrated no improved activity compared with the relaxin-3 B-chain alone. Given that INSL4 is only found in human (Koman et al., 1996
; Hsu et al., 2003), INSL4 may be a unique member of the relaxin subfamily and has distinct structure. A recent report shows that INSL4 peptide lacks tertiary conformation (Lin et al., 2004
). It is possible that the lack of appropriate structural support from INSL4 A-chain in R3/I4 leads to the inactivity of R3/I4, which may also account for the reduced production level of R3/I4 in the recombinant system because proteins without tertiary structure are often secreted less efficiently and tend to degrade faster.
In summary, we created a relaxin-3 chimeric peptide, R3/I5, as a selective ligand for GPCR135 and GPCR142 over LGR7. This chimeric molecule opens a new avenue for future in vivo studies of the physiological function of GPCR135 particularly in rat, which has no functional GPCR142. In addition, 125I-R3/I5 is a much more hydrophilic peptide compared with the relaxin-3 wild-type peptide and binds GPCR135-expressing cells with a much greater signal-to-noise ratio; therefore, it is a useful tool for radioligand autoradiographic studies. Also in this report, by expression and functional characterization of chimeric peptides with relaxin-3 B-chain and A-chains from different members of the relaxin subfamily, we have demonstrated that the A-chains from many members are structurally and functionally exchangeable. These results offer very useful information for the future production of modified peptides for relaxin-related peptides. Functional analysis of the chimeric peptides has provided valuable information for the future study of the structure/function relationship of the relaxin-related peptides. In addition, chimeric peptide studies indicate that GPCR135, or GPCR142 may only directly interact with the B-chain of relaxin-3, whereas LGR7 and LGR8 interact with both the B-chain and A-chain of their ligands. Finally, relaxin-3 chimeric peptide studies suggest that the receptors for INSL4 may be distinct from GPCR135, GPCR142, LGR7, and LGR8, whereas the receptor for INSL6 may be a close neighbor of LGR7 or LGR8.
| Footnotes |
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ABBREVIATIONS: GPCR, G protein-coupled receptor; LGR, leucine-rich repeat-containing G protein-coupled receptor; INSL, insulin-like peptide; CPRG, chlorophenol red-
-D-galactopyranoside;
-gal,
-galactosidase; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; R3/R1, chimera consisting relaxin-3 B-chain and relaxin-1 A-chain, R3/R2, chimera consisting relaxin-3 B-chain and relaxin-3 A-chain, R3/I, chimera consisting relaxin-3 B-chain and insulin A-chain, R3/I3, chimera consisting relaxin-3 B-chain and INSL3 A-chain, R3/I4, chimera consisting relaxin-3 B-chain and INSL4 A-chain, R3/I5, chimera consisting relaxin-3 B-chain and INSL5 A-chain, R3/I6, chimera consisting relaxin-3 B-chain and INSL6 A-chain, R3/A, chimera consisting relaxin-3 B-chain and an A-chain with arbitrary sequence; HPLC, high-performance liquid chromatography; IGF, insulin-like growth factor.
Address correspondence to: Dr. Changlu Liu, Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development, L.L.C., San Diego, CA 92121. E-mail: cliu9{at}prdus.jnj.com
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