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Featured researches published by Tine Glendorf.


Biochemistry | 2008

Importance of the Solvent-Exposed Residues of the Insulin B Chain α-Helix for Receptor Binding†

Tine Glendorf; Anders R. Sørensen; Erica Nishimura; Ingrid Pettersson; Thomas Børglum Kjeldsen

Conjointly, the solvent-exposed residues of the central alpha-helix of the B chain form a well-defined ridge, which is flanked and partly overlapped by the two described insulin receptor binding surfaces on either side of the insulin molecule. To evaluate the importance of this interface in insulin receptor binding, we developed a new powerful method that allows us to introduce all the naturally occurring amino acids into a given position and subsequently determine the receptor binding affinities of the resulting insulin analogues. The total amino acid scanning mutagenesis was performed at positions B9, B10, B12, B13, B16, and B17, and the vast majority of the insulin analogue precursors were expressed and secreted in amounts close to that of the wild-type (human insulin) precursor. The analogue binding data revealed that positions B12 and B16 were the two positions most affected by the amino acid substitutions. Interestingly, the receptor binding affinities of the B13 analogues were also markedly affected by the amino acid substitutions, suggesting that GluB13 indeed is a part of insulins binding surface. The B10 library screen generated analogues covering a wide range of (20-340%) of relative binding affinities, and the results indicated that a structural stabilization of the central alpha-helix and thereby a more rigid presentation of the binding epitope at the insulin receptor is important for receptor recognition. In conclusion, systematic amino acid scanning mutagenesis allowed us to confirm the importance of the B chain alpha-helix as a central recognition element serving as a linker of a continual binding surface.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Molecular Characterisation of Long-Acting Insulin Analogues in Comparison with Human Insulin, IGF-1 and Insulin X10

Bo Falck Hansen; Tine Glendorf; Anne Charlotte Hegelund; Anders Lundby; Anne Lützen; Rita Slaaby; Carsten E. Stidsen

Aims/Hypothesis There is controversy with respect to molecular characteristics of insulin analogues. We report a series of experiments forming a comprehensive characterisation of the long acting insulin analogues, glargine and detemir, in comparison with human insulin, IGF-1, and the super-mitogenic insulin, X10. Methods We measured binding of ligands to membrane-bound and solubilised receptors, receptor activation and mitogenicity in a number of cell types. Results Detemir and glargine each displayed a balanced affinity for insulin receptor (IR) isoforms A and B. This was also true for X10, whereas IGF-1 had a higher affinity for IR-A than IR-B. X10 and glargine both exhibited a higher relative IGF-1R than IR binding affinity, whereas detemir displayed an IGF-1R:IR binding ratio of ≤1. Ligands with high relative IGF-1R affinity also had high affinity for IR/IGF-1R hybrid receptors. In general, the relative binding affinities of the analogues were reflected in their ability to phosphorylate the IR and IGF-1R. Detailed analysis revealed that X10, in contrast to the other ligands, seemed to evoke a preferential phosphorylation of juxtamembrane and kinase domain phosphorylation sites of the IR. Sustained phosphorylation was only observed from the IR after stimulation with X10, and after stimulation with IGF-1 from the IGF-1R. Both X10 and glargine showed an increased mitogenic potency compared to human insulin in cells expressing many IGF-1Rs, whereas only X10 showed increased mitogenicity in cells expressing many IRs. Conclusions Detailed analysis of receptor binding, activation and in vitro mitogenicity indicated no molecular safety concern with detemir.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Engineering of Insulin Receptor Isoform-Selective Insulin Analogues

Tine Glendorf; Carsten E. Stidsen; Mathias Norrman; Erica Nishimura; Anders R. Sørensen; Thomas Børglum Kjeldsen

Background The insulin receptor (IR) exists in two isoforms, A and B, and the isoform expression pattern is tissue-specific. The C-terminus of the insulin B chain is important for receptor binding and has been shown to contact the IR just adjacent to the region where the A and B isoforms differ. The aim of this study was to investigate the importance of the C-terminus of the B chain in IR isoform binding in order to explore the possibility of engineering tissue-specific/liver-specific insulin analogues. Methodology/Principal Findings Insulin analogue libraries were constructed by total amino acid scanning mutagenesis. The relative binding affinities for the A and B isoform of the IR were determined by competition assays using scintillation proximity assay technology. Structural information was obtained by X-ray crystallography. Introduction of B25A or B25N mutations resulted in analogues with a 2-fold preference for the B compared to the A isoform, whereas the opposite was observed with a B25Y substitution. An acidic amino acid residue at position B27 caused an additional 2-fold selective increase in affinity for the receptor B isoform for analogues bearing a B25N mutation. Furthermore, the combination of B25H with either B27D or B27E also resulted in B isoform-preferential analogues (2-fold preference) even though the corresponding single mutation analogues displayed no differences in relative isoform binding affinity. Conclusions/Significance We have discovered a new class of IR isoform-selective insulin analogues with 2–4-fold differences in relative binding affinities for either the A or the B isoform of the IR compared to human insulin. Our results demonstrate that a mutation at position B25 alone or in combination with a mutation at position B27 in the insulin molecule confers IR isoform selectivity. Isoform-preferential analogues may provide new opportunities for developing insulin analogues with improved clinical benefits.


Biochemical Journal | 2011

Receptor-isoform-selective insulin analogues give tissue-preferential effects.

Sara Vienberg; Stephan D. Bouman; Heidi Sørensen; Carsten E. Stidsen; Thomas Børglum Kjeldsen; Tine Glendorf; Anders R. Sørensen; Grith Skytte Olsen; Birgitte Andersen; Erica Nishimura

The relative expression patterns of the two IR (insulin receptor) isoforms, +/- exon 11 (IR-B/IR-A respectively), are tissue-dependent. Therefore we have developed insulin analogues with different binding affinities for the two isoforms to test whether tissue-preferential biological effects can be attained. In rats and mice, IR-B is the most prominent isoform in the liver (> 95%) and fat (> 90%), whereas in muscles IR-A is the dominant isoform (> 95%). As a consequence, the insulin analogue INS-A, which has a higher relative affinity for human IR-A, had a higher relative potency [compared with HI (human insulin)] for glycogen synthesis in rat muscle strips (26%) than for glycogen accumulation in rat hepatocytes (5%) and for lipogenesis in rat adipocytes (4%). In contrast, the INS-B analogue, which has an increased affinity for human IR-B, had higher relative potencies (compared with HI) for inducing glycogen accumulation (75%) and lipogenesis (130%) than for affecting muscle (45%). For the same blood-glucose-lowering effect upon acute intravenous dosing of mice, INS-B gave a significantly higher degree of IR phosphorylation in liver than HI. These in vitro and in vivo results indicate that insulin analogues with IR-isoform-preferential binding affinity are able to elicit tissue-selective biological responses, depending on IR-A/IR-B expression.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Systematic Evaluation of the Metabolic to Mitogenic Potency Ratio for B10-Substituted Insulin Analogues

Tine Glendorf; Louise Knudsen; Carsten E. Stidsen; Bo Falck Hansen; Anne Charlotte Hegelund; Anders R. Sørensen; Erica Nishimura; Thomas Børglum Kjeldsen

Background Insulin analogues comprising acidic amino acid substitutions at position B10 have previously been shown to display increased mitogenic potencies compared to human insulin and the underlying molecular mechanisms have been subject to much scrutiny and debate. However, B10 is still an attractive position for amino acid substitutions given its important role in hexamer formation. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationships between the receptor binding properties as well as the metabolic and mitogenic potencies of a series of insulin analogues with different amino acid substitutions at position B10 and to identify a B10-substituted insulin analogue without an increased mitogenic to metabolic potency ratio. Methodology/Principal Findings A panel of ten singly-substituted B10 insulin analogues with different amino acid side chain characteristics were prepared and insulin receptor (both isoforms) and IGF-I receptor binding affinities using purified receptors, insulin receptor dissociation rates using BHK cells over-expressing the human insulin receptor, metabolic potencies by lipogenesis in isolated rat adipocytes, and mitogenic potencies using two different cell types predominantly expressing either the insulin or the IGF-I receptor were systematically investigated. Only analogues B10D and B10E with significantly increased insulin and IGF-I receptor affinities as well as decreased insulin receptor dissociation rates displayed enhanced mitogenic potencies in both cell types employed. For the remaining analogues with less pronounced changes in receptor affinities and insulin receptor dissociation rates, no apparent correlation between insulin receptor occupancy time and mitogenicity was observed. Conclusions/Significance Several B10-substituted insulin analogues devoid of disproportionate increases in mitogenic compared to metabolic potencies were identified. In the present study, receptor binding affinity rather than insulin receptor off-rate appears to be the major determinant of both metabolic and mitogenic potency. Our results also suggest that the increased mitogenic potency is attributable to both insulin and IGF-I receptor activation.


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

Rapid acting insulin analogues

Helle Birk Olsen; Thomas Boerglum Kjeldsen; Per Balschmidt; Tine Glendorf; Svend Havelund


Archive | 2009

Novel Insulin Analogues

Carsten E. Stidsen; Tine Glendorf; Thomas Børglum Kjeldsen


Archive | 2017

Análogos de insulina acilada, estabilizados frente a proteasas

Thomas Hoeg-Jensen; Tina Møller Tagmose; Thomas Børglum Kjeldsen; Tine Glendorf; Patrick William Garibay; Peter Madsen; Palle Jakobsen; János Tibor Kodra; Jacob Sten Petersen


Archive | 2009

The protease stabilized insulin acylated analogs

János Tibor Kodra; Jacob Sten Petersen; Tine Glendorf; Peter Madsen; Thomas Børglum Kjeldsen; Thomas Hoeg-Jensen; Palle Jakobsen; Tina Møller Tagmose; Patrick William Garibay

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