7MLL image
Deposition Date 2021-04-28
Release Date 2021-05-19
Last Version Date 2024-10-30
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
7MLL
Keywords:
Title:
Solution structure of Exenatide (exendin-4) in 30-vol% trifluoroethanol using CS-Rosetta
Biological Source:
Source Organism:
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Conformers Calculated:
3000
Conformers Submitted:
5
Selection Criteria:
structures with the lowest energy
Macromolecular Entities
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Molecule:Exendin-4
Chain IDs:A
Chain Length:40
Number of Molecules:1
Biological Source:Heloderma suspectum
Ligand Molecules
Primary Citation
Facilitated structure verification of the biopharmaceutical peptide exenatide by 2D heteronuclear NMR maps.
J Pharm Biomed Anal 203 114136 114136 (2021)
PMID: 34087552 DOI: 10.1016/j.jpba.2021.114136

Abstact

Exenatide is a peptide based anti-diabetic prescription medication. Until now, the literature has lacked a comprehensive atom-specific molecular characterization for this complex large peptide by NMR spectroscopy that can be effortlessly and rapidly utilized for biopharmaceutical structural veracity. Peptide structure verification by NMR is challenging and cumbersome when reliant on traditional proton-based methodology (through-bond and through-space proton connectivity) alone due to increasing complexity, low signal dispersion, and overlap. These challenges are overcome by using 2D heteronuclear (1H-13C and 1H-15N) maps that not only allow unambiguous signal assignment, but also condense the structural verification information within simplified peptide amide and carbon fingerprint maps. Here we report such simplified amide and carbon fingerprint maps for exenatide; made possible by the first ever comprehensive heteronuclear (1H,13C, and 15N) atom specific assignment of exenatide. These heteronuclear assignments were obtained without any isotopic enrichments i.e. at natural abundance, and hence are easily deployable as routine procedures. Furthermore, we compare the 2D heteronuclear maps of exenatide to a chemically identical peptide differing only in the isomerism of the Cα position of the first amino acid, [dHis1]-exenatide, to demonstrate the uniqueness of these maps. We show that despite deliberate changes in pH, temperature, and concentrations, the differences between the amide maps of exenatide and [dHis1]-exenatide are retained. The work presented here not only provides a facilitated structure verification of exenatide but also a framework for heteronuclear NMR data acquisition and signal assignment of large peptides, at natural abundance, in creating their respective unique 2D fingerprint maps.

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