Abstract
Using surface plasmon resonance (SPR) and electrospray mass spectrometry (ESI-MS), proinsulin C-peptide was found to influence insulin-insulin interactions. In SPR with chip-bound insulin, C-peptide mixed with analyte insulin increased the binding, while alone C-peptide did not. A control peptide with the same residues in random sequence had little effect. In ESI-MS, C-peptide lowered the presence of insulin hexamer. The data suggest that C-peptide promotes insulin disaggregation. Insulin/insulin oligomer μM dissociation constants were determined. Compatible with these findings, type 1 diabetic patients receiving insulin and C-peptide developed 66% more stimulation of glucose metabolism than when given insulin alone. A role of C-peptide in promoting insulin disaggregation may be important physiologically during exocytosis of pancreatic β-cell secretory granulae and pharmacologically at insulin injection sites. It is compatible with the normal co-release of C-peptide and insulin and may contribute to the beneficial effect of C-peptide and insulin replacement in type 1 diabetics. © Birkhäuser Verlag, 2006.
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Shafqat, J., Melles, E., Sigmundsson, K., Johansson, B. L., Ekberg, K., Alvelius, G., … Jörnvall, H. (2006). Proinsulin C-peptide elicits disaggregation of insulin resulting in enhanced physiological insulin effects. Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 63(15), 1805–1811. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00018-006-6204-6
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