Nitin A. Patil
Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health
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Publication
Featured researches published by Nitin A. Patil.
International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2015
Nitin A. Patil; Julien Tailhades; Richard A. Hughes; Frances Separovic; John D. Wade; Mohammed Akhter Hossain
Bioactive peptides play important roles in metabolic regulation and modulation and many are used as therapeutics. These peptides often possess disulfide bonds, which are important for their structure, function and stability. A systematic network of enzymes—a disulfide bond generating enzyme, a disulfide bond donor enzyme and a redox cofactor—that function inside the cell dictates the formation and maintenance of disulfide bonds. The main pathways that catalyze disulfide bond formation in peptides and proteins in prokaryotes and eukaryotes are remarkably similar and share several mechanistic features. This review summarizes the formation of disulfide bonds in peptides and proteins by cellular and recombinant machinery.
Journal of Peptide Science | 2015
Julien Tailhades; Nitin A. Patil; Mohammed Akhter Hossain; John D. Wade
Intramolecular acyl transfer equilibrium in peptides and proteins has stimulated the development of new methodologies for ligation, aggregation suppression or difficult peptide synthesis. Native chemical ligation or aggregation suppression methodologies are based on an X‐to‐N acyl transfer of a peptide chain (X = S, O). The reverse reaction from N‐to‐X has led to exciting developments in solving key synthetic problems such as peptide thioester preparation using Fmoc/tBu strategy. Depending on the target peptide or protein, variations of these methods, which are also based on acyl transfer equilibriums, are now available.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2017
Nitin A. Patil; K Johan Rosengren; Frances Separovic; John D. Wade; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Mohammed Akhter Hossain
The human relaxin peptide family consists of seven cystine‐rich peptides, four of which are known to signal through relaxin family peptide receptors, RXFP1–4. As these peptides play a vital role physiologically and in various diseases, they are of considerable importance for drug discovery and development. Detailed structure–activity relationship (SAR) studies towards understanding the role of important residues in each of these peptides have been reported over the years and utilized for the design of antagonists and minimized agonist variants. This review summarizes the current knowledge of the SAR of human relaxin 2 (H2 relaxin), human relaxin 3 (H3 relaxin), human insulin‐like peptide 3 (INSL3) and human insulin‐like peptide 5 (INSL5).
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Alessia Belgi; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Martina Kocan; Nitin A. Patil; Suode Zhang; Geoffrey W. Tregear; John D. Wade; Mohammed Akhter Hossain
Insulin-like peptide 5 (INSL5) is a complex two-chain peptide hormone constrained by three disulfide bonds in a pattern identical to insulin. High expression of INSL5 in the colon suggests roles in activation of colon motility and appetite control. A more recent study indicates it may have significant roles in the regulation of insulin secretion and β-cell homeostasis. This peptide thus has considerable potential for the treatment of eating disorders, obesity, and/or diabetes. However, the synthesis of INSL5 is extremely challenging either by chemical or recombinant means. The A-chain is very poorly soluble and the B-chain is highly aggregating in nature which, together, makes their postsynthesis handling and purification very difficult. Given these difficulties, we have developed a highly active INSL5 analogue that has a much simpler structure with two disulfide bonds and is thus easier to assemble compared to native INSL5. This minimized peptide represents an attractive new mimetic for investigating the functional role of INSL5.
Nature Communications | 2016
Ashish Sethi; Shoni Bruell; Nitin A. Patil; Mohammed Akhter Hossain; Daniel J. Scott; Emma J. Petrie; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Paul R. Gooley
H2 relaxin activates the relaxin family peptide receptor-1 (RXFP1), a class A G-protein coupled receptor, by a poorly understood mechanism. The ectodomain of RXFP1 comprises an N-terminal LDLa module, essential for activation, tethered to a leucine-rich repeat (LRR) domain by a 32-residue linker. H2 relaxin is hypothesized to bind with high affinity to the LRR domain enabling the LDLa module to bind and activate the transmembrane domain of RXFP1. Here we define a relaxin-binding site on the LDLa-LRR linker, essential for the high affinity of H2 relaxin for the ectodomain of RXFP1, and show that residues within the LDLa-LRR linker are critical for receptor activation. We propose H2 relaxin binds and stabilizes a helical conformation of the LDLa-LRR linker that positions residues of both the linker and the LDLa module to bind the transmembrane domain and activate RXFP1.
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
John A. Karas; Nitin A. Patil; Julien Tailhades; Marc-Antoine Sani; Denis B. Scanlon; Briony E. Forbes; James Gardiner; Frances Separovic; John D. Wade; Mohammed Akhter Hossain
Despite recent advances in the treatment of diabetes mellitus, storage of insulin formulations at 4 °C is still necessary to minimize chemical degradation. This is problematic in tropical regions where reliable refrigeration is not ubiquitous. Some degradation byproducts are caused by disulfide shuffling of cystine that leads to covalently bonded oligomers. Consequently we examined the utility of the non-reducible cystine isostere, cystathionine, within the A-chain. Reported herein is an efficient method for forming this mimic using simple monomeric building blocks. The intra-A-chain cystathionine insulin analogue was obtained in good overall yield, chemically characterized and demonstrated to possess native binding affinity for the insulin receptor isoform B. It was also shown to possess significantly enhanced thermal stability indicating potential application to next-generation insulin analogues.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
Nitin A. Patil; Richard A. Hughes; Martina Kocan; Sheng Y. Ang; Julien Tailhades; Frances Separovic; Roger J. Summers; Johannes Grosse; John D. Wade; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Mohammed Akhter Hossain
Insulin-like peptide 5 (INSL5) has recently been discovered as only the second orexigenic gut hormone after ghrelin. As we have previously reported, INSL5 is extremely difficult to assemble and oxidize into its two-chain three-disulfide structure. The focus of this study was to generate structure-activity relationships (SARs) of INSL5 and use it to develop a potent and simpler INSL5 mimetic with RXFP4 agonist activity. A series of human and mouse INSL5 (hINSL5/mINSL5) analogues were designed and chemically synthesized, resulting in a chimeric INSL5 analogue exhibiting more than 10-fold higher potency (0.35 nM) at human RXFP4 compared with native hINSL5 (4.57 nM). The SAR study also identified a key residue (K(A15)) in the A-chain of mINSL5 that contributes to improved RXFP4 affinity and potency of mINSL5 compared with hINSL5. This knowledge ultimately led us to engineer a minimized hINSL5 mimetic agonist that retains native hINSL5-like RXFP4 affinity and potency at human RXFP4. This minimized analogue was synthesized in 17.5-fold higher yield and in less time compared with hINSL5.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2017
Sheng Y. Ang; Dana S. Hutchinson; Nitin A. Patil; Bronwyn A. Evans; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Michelle L. Halls; Mohammed Akhter Hossain; Roger J. Summers; Martina Kocan
Insulin‐like peptide 5 (INSL5) is a two‐chain, three‐disulfide‐bonded peptide of the insulin/relaxin superfamily, uniquely expressed in enteroendocrine L‐cells of the colon. It is the cognate ligand of relaxin family peptide RXFP4 receptor that is mainly expressed in the colorectum and enteric nervous system. This study identifies new signalling pathways activated by INSL5 acting on RXFP4 receptors.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2016
Sheng Y. Ang; Dana S. Hutchinson; Nitin A. Patil; Bronwyn A. Evans; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Michelle L. Halls; Mohammed Akhter Hossain; Roger J. Summers; Martina Kocan
Insulin‐like peptide 5 (INSL5) is a two‐chain, three‐disulfide‐bonded peptide of the insulin/relaxin superfamily, uniquely expressed in enteroendocrine L‐cells of the colon. It is the cognate ligand of relaxin family peptide RXFP4 receptor that is mainly expressed in the colorectum and enteric nervous system. This study identifies new signalling pathways activated by INSL5 acting on RXFP4 receptors.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015
Elaheh Jamasbi; Giuseppe D. Ciccotosto; Julien Tailhades; Roy M. Robins-Browne; Cathryn L. Ugalde; Robyn A. Sharples; Nitin A. Patil; John D. Wade; Mohammed Akhter Hossain; Frances Separovic
The mechanism of membrane disruption by melittin (MLT) of giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) and live cells was studied using fluorescence microscopy and two fluorescent synthetic analogues of MLT. The N-terminus of one of these was acylated with thiopropionic acid to enable labeling with maleimido-AlexaFluor 430 to study the interaction of MLT with live cells. It was compared with a second analogue labeled at P14C. The results indicated that the fluorescent peptides adhered to the membrane bilayer of phosphatidylcholine GUVs and inserted into the plasma membrane of HeLa cells. Fluorescence and light microscopy revealed changes in cell morphology after exposure to MLT peptides and showed bleb formation in the plasma membrane of HeLa cells. However, the membrane disruptive effect was dependent upon the location of the fluorescent label on the peptide and was greater when MLT was labeled at the N-terminus. Proline at position 14 appeared to be important for antimicrobial activity, hemolysis and cytotoxicity, but not essential for cell membrane disruption.