Engineering and characterization of a long half-life relaxin receptor RXFP1 agonist

Publication information:

Erlandson, Sarah C., Jialu Wang, Haoran Jiang, Howard A. Rockman, and Andrew C. Kruse. 2022. “Engineering and Characterization of a Long Half-Life Relaxin Receptor RXFP1 Agonist”. BioRxiv. doi:10.1101/2022.04.19.488796.

Abstract

Relaxin-2 is a peptide hormone with important roles in human cardiovascular and reproductive biology. Its ability to activate cellular responses such as vasodilation, angiogenesis, and anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic effects have led to significant interest in using relaxin-2 as a therapeutic for heart failure and several fibrotic conditions. However, recombinant relaxin-2 has a very short serum half-life, limiting its clinical applications. Here we present protein engineering efforts targeting the relaxin-2 hormone in order to increase its serum half-life, while maintaining its ability to activate the G protein-coupled receptor RXFP1. To achieve this, we optimized a fusion between relaxin-2 and an antibody Fc fragment, generating a version of the hormone with a circulating half-life of up to five days in mice while retaining potent agonist activity at the RXFP1 receptor both in vitro and in vivo.Competing Interest StatementA.C.K. and S.C.E are inventors on a patent application for engineered single-chain relaxin proteins. A.C.K. is a co-founder and consultant for Tectonic Therapeutic and Seismic Therapeutic and for the Institute for Protein Innovation, a non-profit research institute.