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Dive into the research topics where Patrick William Garibay is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrick William Garibay.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Crystal Structure of Glucagon-like Peptide-1 in Complex with the Extracellular Domain of the Glucagon-like Peptide-1 Receptor

Christina Rye Underwood; Patrick William Garibay; Lotte Bjerre Knudsen; Sven Hastrup; Günther H. Peters; Rainer Rudolph; Steffen Reedtz-Runge

GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide-1) is an incretin released from intestinal L-cells in response to food intake. Activation of the GLP-1 receptor potentiates the synthesis and release of insulin from pancreatic β-cells in a glucose-dependent manner. The GLP-1 receptor belongs to class B of the G-protein-coupled receptors, a subfamily characterized by a large N-terminal extracellular ligand binding domain. Exendin-4 and GLP-1 are 50% identical, and exendin-4 is a full agonist with similar affinity and potency for the GLP-1 receptor. We recently solved the crystal structure of the GLP-1 receptor extracellular domain in complex with the competitive antagonist exendin-4(9–39). Interestingly, the isolated extracellular domain binds exendin-4 with much higher affinity than the endogenous agonist GLP-1. Here, we have solved the crystal structure of the extracellular domain in complex with GLP-1 to 2.1 Åresolution. The structure shows that important hydrophobic ligand-receptor interactions are conserved in agonist- and antagonist-bound forms of the extracellular domain, but certain residues in the ligand-binding site adopt a GLP-1-specific conformation. GLP-1 is a kinked but continuous α-helix from Thr13 to Val33 when bound to the extracellular domain. We supplemented the crystal structure with site-directed mutagenesis to link the structural information of the isolated extracellular domain with the binding properties of the full-length receptor. The data support the existence of differences in the binding modes of GLP-1 and exendin-4 on the full-length GLP-1 receptor.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1998

Decarboxylation-based traceless linking with aroyl acrylic acids

Patrick William Garibay; John Nielsen; Thomas Hoeg-Jensen

Abstract β-Keto carboxylic acids are known to decarboxylate readily. In our pursuit to synthesize β-indolinyl propiophenones, we have exploited this chemistry as a mean of establishing a traceless handle. 2-Aroyl acrylic acids have been esterified to a trityl resin, after which Michael-type addition of indolines have been performed. Upon cleavage, the products are decarboxylated, and the β-indolinyl propiophenones are isolated. The reaction conditions have been optimized, and a small library has been prepared.


Peptides | 2013

Development of a cysteine-deprived and C-terminally truncated GLP-1 receptor.

Christina Rye Underwood; Lotte Bjerre Knudsen; Patrick William Garibay; Günther H. Peters; Steffen Reedtz-Runge

The glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) belongs to family B of the G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs), and has become a promising target for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Here we describe the development and characterization of a fully functional cysteine-deprived and C-terminally truncated GLP-1R. Single cysteines were initially substituted with alanine, and functionally redundant cysteines were subsequently changed simultaneously. Our results indicate that Cys(174), Cys(226), Cys(296) and Cys(403) are important for the GLP-1-mediated response, whereas Cys(236), Cys(329), Cys(341), Cys(347), Cys(438), Cys(458) and Cys(462) are not. Extensive deletions were made in the C-terminal tail of GLP-1R in order to determine the limit for truncation. As for other family B GPCRs, we observed a direct correlation between the length of the C-terminal tail and specific binding of (125)I-GLP-1, indicating that the membrane proximal part of the C-terminal is involved in receptor expression at the cell surface. The results show that seven cysteines and more than half of the C-terminal tail can be removed from GLP-1R without compromising GLP-1 binding or function.


Archive | 2009

Pegylated Factor VII Glycoforms

Niels Kristian Klausen; Søren E. Bjørn; Carsten Behrens; Patrick William Garibay


Archive | 2004

Use of galactose oxidase for selective chemical conjugation of protractor molecules to proteins of therapeutic interest

Carsten Behrens; Patrick William Garibay; Magali Zundel; Niels Kristian Klausen; Søren E. Bjørn


Archive | 2008

Peptides Derivatized with A-B-C-D- and their Therapeutical Use

Jane Spetzler; Lauge Schäffer; Jesper Lau; Thomas Kruse; Patrick William Garibay; Søren Østergaard; Steffen Runge; Henning Thøgersen


Archive | 2008

Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 derivatives and their pharmaceutical use

Jane Spetzler; Lauge Schäffer; Jesper Lau; Thomas Kruse; Patrick William Garibay; Steffen Reedtz-Runge; Henning Thøgersen; Ingrid Pettersson


ACS Combinatorial Science | 2001

Polytetrahydrofuran Cross-Linked Polystyrene Resins for Solid-Phase Organic Synthesis

Patrick H. Toy; Thomas S. Reger; Patrick William Garibay; Jayne C. Garno; J. A. Malikayil; Gang Yu Liu; Kim D. Janda


Archive | 2009

Protease stabilized acylated insulin analogues

Peter Madsen; Thomas Boerglum Kjeldsen; Thomas Hoeg-Jensen; Palle Jakobsen; Tina Moeller Tagmose; Tine Glendorf; Jaanos Tibor Kodra; Patrick William Garibay; Jacob Sten Petersen


Archive | 2008

Semi-recombinant preparation of glp-1 analogues

Jesper Lau; Asser Sloth Andersen; Paw Bloch; Patrick William Garibay; Thomas Kruse; Inga Sig Nielsen Nørby; Claus U. Jessen; Caspar Christensen; Jens Christian Norrild

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