A ligand-receptor fusion of growth hormone forms a dimer and is a potent long-acting agonist

Author:  ["Ian R Wilkinson","Eric Ferrandis","Peter J Artymiuk","Marc Teillot","Chantal Soulard","Caroline Touvay","Sarbendra L Pradhananga","Sue Justice","Zida Wu","Kin C Leung","Christian J Strasburger","Jon R Sayers","Richard J Ross"]

Publication:  Nature Medicine

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:     Medicine

Abstract

Cytokine hormones have a short plasma half-life and require frequent administration. For example, growth hormone replacement involves daily injections. In common with other cytokines, the extracellular domain of the growth hormone receptor circulates as a binding protein, which naturally prolongs the biological half-life of growth hormone. Here we have studied the biological actions of a ligand-receptor fusion of growth hormone and the extracellular domain of its receptor. The genetically engineered ligand-receptor fusion protein was purified from mammalian cell culture. In rats, the ligand-receptor fusion had a 300-times reduced clearance as compared to native growth hormone, and a single injection promoted growth for 10 d, far exceeding the growth seen after administration of native growth hormone. The ligand-receptor fusion forms a reciprocal, head-to-tail dimer that provides a reservoir of inactive hormone similar to the natural reservoir of growth hormone and its binding protein. In conclusion, a ligand-receptor fusion of cytokine to its extracellular receptor generates a potent, long-acting agonist with exceptionally slow absorption and elimination. This approach could be easily applied to other cytokines.

Cite this article

Wilkinson, I., Ferrandis, E., Artymiuk, P. et al. A ligand-receptor fusion of growth hormone forms a dimer and is a potent long-acting agonist. Nat Med 13, 1108–1113 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1038/nm1610

View full text

>> Full Text:   A ligand-receptor fusion of growth hormone forms a dimer and is a potent long-acting agonist

Broad HIV-1 neutralization mediated by CD4-binding site antibodies

High levels of GDF15 in thalassemia suppress expression of the iron regulatory protein hepcidin