The effect of fatty diacid acylation of human PYY3-36 on Y2 receptor potency and half-life in minipigs

Peptides are notoriously known to display very short in vivo half-lives often measured in minutes which in many cases greatly reduces or eliminates sufficient in vivo efficacy. To obtain long half-lives allowing for up to once-weekly dosing regimen, fatty acid acylation (lipidation) have been used to non-covalently associate the peptide to serum albumin thus serving as a circulating depot. This approach is generally considered in the scientific and patent community as a standard approach to protract almost any given peptide. However, it is not trivial to prolong the half-life of peptides by lipidation and still maintain high potency and good formulation properties. Here we show that attaching a fatty acid to the obesity-drug relevant peptide PYY3-36 is not sufficient for long pharmacokinetics (PK), since the position in the backbone, but also type of fatty acid and linker strongly influences PK and potency. Furthermore, understanding the proteolytic stability of the backbone is key to obtain long half-lives by lipidation, since backbone cleavage still occurs while associated to albumin. Having identified a PYY analogue with a sufficient half-life, we show that in combination with a GLP-1 analogue, liraglutide, additional weight loss can be achieved in the obese minipig model.


Results
Y 2 R potency depends on the fatty diacid acylation position. The fatty acid acylated peptides are listed in Table 1 with the type of fatty acid and linker displayed in Fig. 1a, while The Y 1 R Y 2 R and Y 4 R potency of the lipidation scan is shown in Table 2. Not surprisingly, many of the analogues, notably those with a fatty diacid in the C-terminal part, were all displaying very low receptor potency on all receptor subtypes. The C-terminus of PYY  binds deeply in the pocket of the Y 2 R (Fig. 1b) and subsequently derivatization with a bulky fatty diacid in the C-terminal region (25 to 32) lowers Y 2 R potency, in most cases dramatically ( Table 2). We did not include analogues with a fatty diacid in positions 33 to 36, since it has already been established that any changes to these residues completely abolish receptor potency and binding to all NPY receptors 32 due to significant steric hindrance imposed by, for example, a fatty diacid. The models by Kaiser et al. and B. Xu et al. also support this conclusion 4,33 . Both describe a very close interaction of the Y 2 R with residues in positions 32 to 36, thus not leaving any space for a larger fatty diacid handle. However, in position 30, normally occupied by Leu 30 and indeed very close to the binding pocket (Fig. 1c), there seems to be an opportunity to add a fatty diacid with a modest reduction in the Y 2 R potency, as observed for analogue 28, which displayed approximately a 8-fold reduction in the Y 2 R potency and affinity (Tables 2 and 3). In the context of human pancreatic polypeptide (PP) and the Y 4 R, position 30 has also previously been shown to tolerate lipidation with palmitic acid 34 , further substantiating that PYY and PP both share a common receptor binding mode in their C-terminal region.
The lipidation scan revealed that a fatty diacid is best tolerated in position 10 (analogue 8), which showed reductions in Y 2 R potency and affinity by less than a factor of two (Tables 2 and 3) and was therefore comparable to native PYY  . This was followed by position seven (analogue 5) which exhibited an approximate three-fold reduction in Y 2 R potency and affinity. Other lipidated analogues that display a modest decrease in Y 2 R potency have a fatty diacid in positions 11, 14, 19, 21 and 22, all of which are also exposed to the solvent. The hydrophobic core of the PP fold in PYY 1-36 is composed of Pro 2 , Pro 5 and Pro 8 in the poly-proline sequence, which engage in hydrophobic interactions with Leu 17 , Tyr 20 , Leu 24 and Tyr 27 in the amphipathic helical segment 3 . Notably, Pro 5 , Half-life as a function of position of fatty diacid protractor. As a protractor for the lipidation scan we chose C18 diacid-γGlu-2xAdo (Fig. 1a), proven to be adequate for once-weekly dosing in the GLP-1 analogue semaglutide. We observed a clear trend towards short half-lives around 10-20 hours when the fatty diacid moiety C18 diacid-γGlu-2xAdo was positioned towards the N-terminal end, whereas longer half-lives were observed when the fatty diacid was closer to the C-terminus, resulting in half-lives up to 60-78 hours (Table 1 and Fig. 2a). We hypothesized that attaching the fatty diacid towards the C-terminal end of PYY 3-36 could have a shielding effect against the enzymatic degradation of the C-terminus to PYY  and decided to investigate formation of metabolites in vivo in the minipig model. Indeed, we observed that analogue 1, containing the fatty diacid moiety C18 diacid-γGlu-2xAdo at the N-terminus, rapidly metabolized to the corresponding PYY  and PYY 3-35 metabolites (Fig. 3a), whereas for analogue 28, containing the fatty diacid protractor in position 30, we did not observe degradation of the C-terminus (Fig. 3b). However, in the MS spectrum of the plasma samples taken at 8 hours the N-terminal degradation products PYY  and PYY  were detected with analogue 28, which, while small, were not detected in analogue 1.

Half-life as a function of type of lipidation in position 30. Lipidation with C18 diacid-γGlu-2xAdo
in position 30 (analogue 28) offered a sufficiently long half-life of 76 hours and could be considered as a good compromise between a long half-life, a decent Y 2 R affinity and a potency loss of only a factor 7-10 compared to PYY  . We therefore decided to explore the half-life in more detail as a function of the length of the fatty Sequence of PYY 3-36 and structure of PYY 3-36 (pdb:2DEZ). Depicted in magenta are core residues; shown in blue are critical residues for the interaction interacting with the Y 2 R. (c) In a model of PYY 3-36 with Y 2 R (grey) a loop comprising the receptor residues 294-299 (cyan) is proposed to in proximity with position 30 (model coordinator from reference 33  www.nature.com/scientificreports/ diacids as well as the role of the γGlu with the protractor fixed in position 30. This excluded the influence of the peptide backbone with respect to differences in proteolytic stability caused by variations in the position of the fatty diacid, thereby allowing us to focus the structure-activity relationship solely towards the fatty acid protractor with respect to half-life. The analogue with the shortest fatty acid C14 diacid-γGlu (analogue 34) displayed a half-life of only 4 hours, which increased to 28, 76 and 98 hours for the C16 diacid-γGlu (analogue 35), C18 diacid-γGlu (analogue 28) and C20 diacid-γGlu (analogue 36), respectively (Table 1 and Fig. 2b). We synthesized the same fatty diacid series without γGlu, and observed that this part of the protractor is of tremendous importance for achieving a long half-life. Within the analogue series 37-40 from C14 diacid to C20 diacid, but without γGlu, a significant reduction in half-life was observed, resulting in half-lives of only 2, 4, 13 and 20 hours, respectively (Fig. 2b). For the C20 diacid analogues the presence or absence of γGlu translates into a very large half-life difference of approximately 80 hours. The role of the spacer Ado was also addressed, but there was no difference with respect to half-life, whether 2xAdo (analogue 28), 4xAdo (analogue 42) or 6xAdo (analogue 43) were inserted, since all three analogues displayed similar half-lives of 75-78 hours. Only when the spacer was absent and the C18 diacid-γGlu was directly attached to the side chain of the Lys 30 residue (analogue 41) did we observe an effect. Here the half-life increased to 97 hours (Table 1 and Fig. 2b), compared to half-lives of 75-78 hours with two or more Ado spacers. Most likely, this can be explained by a better shielding effect towards enzymatic cleavage by bringing the peptide backbone closer to albumin.
Binding affinity of fatty diacid acylated analogues to albumin. For the different lengths of fatty diacids, plasma half-life appears to be driven by albumin binding affinity, whereas for the position of the fatty diacid, enzymatic cleavage of the PYY backbone seems to be the key determinant of the half-life, as opposed to differences in albumin affinity. In order to confirm these observations with a complementary assay, we measured the affinity of the PYY compounds to albumin in a direct binding assay (Table 4 and Supplementary Figure S4). www.nature.com/scientificreports/ For this purpose, the fluorescent dye 5(6)-Carboxytetramethylrhodamine (TAMRA) was coupled to the side chain of Lys 4 in a series of PYY 3-36 analogues, which allowed us to follow albumin binding by measuring the increase in fluorescence polarization (FP). To ensure reproducibility, fatty acid-depleted albumins was used, so the PYY peptide would not compete with already bound fatty acids. Under the assay conditions (50 nM peptide, K D ~1 µM), not more than one PYY molecule is bound to one albumin molecule at any time, and the contribution of secondary binding sites on albumin is negligible. Compounds with acylation in position 7 and 10 (analogues 53 and 54) have a similar albumin binding affinity compared to compounds acylated in position 25 (analogue 55), or to those in positions 30 and 33 (analogues 56 and 57), even though their half-lives differ more than five-fold (Table 4). On average, the C18 diacid-γGlu-2xAdo side chain confers an albumin binding affinity of ~ 1 µM.
The relative length of the fatty diacid side chain had a significant effect on both human and porcine albumin binding affinity. We observed an increase by a factor of ten going from C14 diacid-γGlu (analogue 58) to C16 diacid-γGlu (analogue 59), an additional 8-fold increase from C16 diacid-γGlu to C18 diacid-γGlu (analogue 56), and a 5-fold increase going from C18 to a C20 diacid-γGlu (analogue 60), displaying a K d of 0.1 µM (Table 4). This observation correlates well with the observed plasma half-lives of 4, 28, 76 and 99 hours, respectively.
We also wanted to explore whether the binding of our fatty acid acylated PYY analogues was pH dependent. By testing binding at pH 6.0, we could verify whether the fatty diacid acylated analogues were still capable of binding to HSA and PSA at lower pH. Indeed, for both the human and porcine albumins, we observed nearly Table 2. Summary of potency profiles of all PYY analogues lipidated from the N-terminal to position 32. In all analogues the fatty diacid (FA) moiety C18 diacid-γGlu-2xAdo was attached to the side chain of a lysine residue (analogues 2-30 and 52) or to the N-terminus (peptide 1). pEC 50 is calculated as the mean of at least three independent experiments, and the 95% confidence interval (CI) is given as [lower; upper]. The mean EC 50 in nM is calculated from the mean pEC50. For analogue 9 and 20 (data marked with *) two independent experiments were recorded. www.nature.com/scientificreports/ the same binding affinities at pH 6.0 for the fatty diacid series as we do at pH 7.4 (Table 4 and Supplementary Figure S5).

Half-life as a function of backbone modifications.
We have previously reported that N-methyl-arginine in position 35 (MeArg 35 ) stabilizes PYY 3-36 against enzymatic degradation to PYY  in an in vitro setting 35 .
We therefore decided to include analogue 45 with the fatty diacid in position 4, and furthermore containing MeArg 35 . We then compared the half-life to the corresponding analogue without MeArg 35 (analogue 2), which by itself displayed a very short half-life of 14 hours. Indeed, a significant increase in half-life to 83 hours was obtained, thus confirming that, in an in vivo setting, protection against C-terminal cleavage is pivotal for obtaining longer half-lives. This proves that the primary reason for the observed shorter half-lives of the PYY analogues is the C-terminal cleavage of PYY 3-36 to PYY 3-34 .
Since we observed small amounts of N-terminal degradation products for analogue 28, which had a fatty diacid in position 30, we decided to explore additional modifications. The half-life of analogue 47 (Lys 4 to Arg 4 substitution) was unaffected; in fact, it was a little shorter (66 versus 76 hours) compared to that of native backbone. Similarly, a Lys 4 to Ala 4 substitution (46) had little impact on the half-life (84 hours). However, N-terminal acetylation combined with Lys 4 to Arg 4 substitution increased the half-life from 62 hours (47) to 120 hours (50), which supports the observation that an N-terminal modification could protect against additional proteolytic cleavage. Combining the Ala 4 substitution with N-terminal acetylation, as in analogue 49, resulted in a similarly long half-life of 113 hours. In PYY 3-36 , the residue Asn 18 is known to deamidate. This process can be avoided by replacing Asn 18 with Asp 18 , which exhibits good stability against isomerization at neutral pH and, in addition, also improves the formulation properties. We found that substituting Asn 18 with Asp 18 (analogue 48) increased the half-life to 104 hours compared to the parent analogue 28, a gain of approximately 28 hours. Previous studies of proteolysis of PYY 3-36 suggested a potential cleavage site between Pro 14 -Glu 15 , among others 36 . It is reasonable to speculate that Asp 18 might improve protection against degradation in this region. However, combining N-terminal acetylation with Ala 4 and Asp 18 , as in analogue 51, led to a half-life of 114 hours, which was similar to that of analogue 49 (113 hours) suggesting that the effects are not additive in this context.

In vivo efficacy of a PYY analogue in combination with GLP-1.
We designed an analogue 52 with Lys 4 to Arg 4 and Asn 18 to Gln 18 substitutions, with the former substitution allowing selective fatty diacid acylation only on Lys 30 for ease of large-scale production, while the Gln 18 was chosen to eliminate deamidation. Since the half-life of the compound in mini-pigs was 78 hours and the Y 2 R affinity and potency was only four to six-fold reduced compared to PYY 3-36 , this analogue was an attractive model compound for further in vivo evaluation in obese Göttingen Minipigs. Liraglutide alone reduced food intake by approximately 65% in both groups. When PYY was given in combination with liraglutide an additional, significant food intake reduction was observed and maintained until the termination of the experiment after 6 weeks of combination treatment. These reductions in food intake resulted in a BW loss of approximately 8.5% in the liraglutide-alone group, whereas the addition of analogue 52 resulted in an additional reduction of BW of approximately 9% from day 70-112, thus adding up to close to 20% of weight loss in total (Fig. 4). Table 3. In vitro Y 2 R SPA binding as a function of fatty diacid position and fatty diacid length in the absence (0% HSA) or presence of serum albumin (2% HSA). pK i is calculated as the mean of at least three independent experiments, and the 95% confidence interval (CI) is given as [lower; upper]. The mean K i in nM is calculated from the mean pK i .

Discussion
Peptides are notoriously known to display a very short half-life in plasma, ranging from a few minutes to less than one hour, which in most cases results in a low or absent in vivo efficacy and therefore renders them unsuitable for therapeutic use. In particular, PYY  has been shown to be degraded rapidly and cleared with a half-life of 5-10 minutes, necessitating the design of analogues with much longer half-lives to obtain in vivo efficacy. Lipidation of peptides is commonly used and considered to be a universal method to protract otherwise short-lived peptides. However, it is not a guarantee that by using this type of protractor moiety a long half-life is always obtained while also maintaining target receptor potency and proper formulation properties. In fact, as we show in this report, sufficient half-life is only obtained if the integrity of the peptide is also preserved. The fatty diacid acylation scan of PYY 3-36 revealed that adding fatty diacids in close proximity to the C-terminus not only compromised the Y 2 R potency, but also showed that residues that are part of the core of the PP-fold are critical for maintaining good Y 2 R potency. However, we identified positions 7 (Ala 7 ), 10 (Glu 10 ) and 22 (Ser 22 ) as positions where a fatty diacid protractor had only little impact on the Y 2 R potency (two to three-fold reduction compared to PYY  ). This modest reduction in Y 2 R potency may partly be explained by the fact that the protractor is positioned farther away from the receptor, thus avoiding disruptive steric hindrance, but it is also likely rationalized by the preservation of the PP-fold, since both Ala 7 , Glu 10 and Ser 22 are exposed to the solvent (Fig. 1b). We also measured the Y 2 R binding affinity in the presence of 2% albumin (HSA) and for all analogues the affinity was negatively impacted irrespectively of the position of the fatty diacid, when compared to the binding affinity measured in the absence of albumin. We observed 630 and 160-fold reduction in affinity for the analogues 5 and 7 which had a C18 diacid in position 7 and 10, respectively (Table 3). This was on the same level when the C18 diacid was present in position 30 displaying a 250-fold reduction in affinity. Since position 30 is closer to  www.nature.com/scientificreports/ the receptor we would have expected a larger shift in Y 2 R affinity compared to the beforementioned analogues, where it is expected that the albumin may be farther away from the receptor. Only for the shorter C14 and C16 diacids, and thus displaying decreased HSA affinity, the shift in Y 2 R affinities was less affected which is the result of a larger unbound fraction of the PYY analogue. This shift in albumin binding does not hinder sufficient in vivo efficacy. The once-weekly and very potent GLP-1 analogue, semaglutide was in fact one of the analogues with the largest shift in the presence of 2% serum albumin 28 . When the fatty diacid was placed in position 30, we also observed a tendency of increased binding as a function of longer fatty acid length in the absence of serum albumin (Table 3). It can be speculated that the shorter fatty diacids may interact in a less favorable way with the negative charged residues that are present in the surroundings of the binding pocket in the Y 2 R. The protractor C18 diacid-γGlu-2xAdo used in the fatty diacid acylation scan is the same albumin binder present in once-weekly GLP-1 analogue semaglutide, which displays a half-life of approximately 46 hours in the minipig model 28 and approximately 168 hours in humans 37 . Surprisingly, attaching this protractor to PYY 3-36 resulted in many analogues with much shorter half-lives in minipigs than reported for the once-weekly dosed semaglutide, even as short as only six hours. We observed a clear trend towards shorter half-lives when the protractor was present in the N-terminal part, whereas the half-lives increased above 50 hours when it was positioned towards the C-terminal end (Fig. 2a). By analyzing minipig plasma samples for metabolites, we concluded that PYY 3-36 is rapidly cleaved to PYY 3-34 while bound to albumin, and that by placing the fatty diacid moiety closer to the C-terminus, we could shield the peptide against enzymatic degradation. In addition, the fatty diacid moiety per se could also prohibit the enzymatic cleavage by imposing steric hindrance. Both shielding effects could explain the differences in half-lives, but the differences in albumin binding affinity could also play a role. In order to rule out that the major differences in observed half-lives were caused by differences in albumin affinity, we performed a FP assay to determine the affinity of analogues for both the human and porcine serum albumin. By comparing the affinities observed for analogues with fatty diacid in positions 7, 10, 25, 30 and 33, which represent a range of half-lives from 11 to 76 hours, we concluded that albumin affinity could not explain differences in half-lives, since all analogues bound to albumin with similar K d s within the range of 0.5 to 2 µM. The FP albumin binding assay was also used to determine the albumin affinities as a function of fatty diacid length, fixed in position 30. As expected, the fatty diacid length strongly affects the albumin affinity, with the shortest C14 diacid-γGlu displaying an affinity (K d ) of only 40 µM for human albumin, which gradually increases as a function of fatty diacid length to 4.2, 0.5 and 0.1 µM for the C16 diacid-γGlu, C18 diacid-γGlu and C20 www.nature.com/scientificreports/ diacid-γGlu, respectively (Table 4). For porcine serum albumin we obtained very similar affinities for the same set of analogues, demonstrating a clear correlation between the albumin binding affinity as a function of fatty diacid length and the observed half-lives in minipigs. It also underlines that the minipig model is useful in order to rank and select analogues with an expected long half-life in humans, albeit allometric scaling using several species is needed for more a predictive half-life determination 38 . Both albumin and IgG display extraordinary long half-lives of approximately 19 days. They bind FcRn simultaneously in a pH dependent manner, with strong  www.nature.com/scientificreports/ binding at pH 6.0 and much lower affinity at physiological pH 39 which in turn ensures rescue of both albumin and IgG from degradation in the endothelial cells and hematopoietic cells. Since our analogues still bound almost equally well at pH 6.0 as at pH 7.4, we believe that the ultra-long half-lives we observe for some of analogues is also due to recycling by the FcRn while bound to albumin. This is a new observation and opens for the likelihood that the half-life of a peptide drug approaching the half-life of albumin itself may be achievable. This assumes that strong enough affinity to albumin is reached and the backbone is preserved from enzymatic degradation. Not only the length of fatty diacid itself, but also the additional γGlu between fatty diacid and spacer are of importance. The influence of γGlu has previously been studied in the context of GLP-1 using the C16 fatty acid, palmitic acid, as the lipid moiety, and in this particular context, γGlu showed only a minor effect on the half-life 40 . Surprisingly, with the fatty diacids series used in this study, we observed huge differences in half-lives with or without γGlu. The C20 diacid series displayed a difference as large as 79 hours, whereas for the C18 diacid and C16 diacid series differences of 63 and 24 hours were observed, respectively (Fig. 2b). These differences representing a six to seven-fold change illustrate the importance of a negative charge that mimics the negative charge in the distal part of fatty acid and diacids. We also made three analogues in order to determine the effect of the spacer separating the fatty moiety from the peptide backbone. For analogue 41 with no Ado spacer, the half-life increased from 76 to 98 hours compared to analogue 28 which had two Ado spacers (Table 1 and Fig. 2b). This is likely due to a closer association of albumin to the peptide, thereby providing a better shielding effect against C-terminal degradation. Adding four or six Ado spacer units, as in analogues 42 and 43, on the other hand did not affect the half-life (Table 1).
Since we observed that PYY 3-36 is rapidly degraded to PYY 3-34 , despite being associated to albumin, we decided to design an analogue that was stabilized in the C-terminus in order to determine whether this strategy would also prolong the half-life in vivo. Previously, we have identified MeArg 35 36 , and we hypothesize that Asp 18 might improve protection against degradation in this region. The half-life of porcine serum albumin has been determined to approximately 8.2 days (197 hours) 41 . In general, we observe an upper limit of half-lives in the mini-pig model in the range of 120-140 hours, illustrating that we have likely reached the upper level in this model with respect to the ranking of these ultra-long acting analogues.
The combination of analogues of GLP-1 and PYY has been shown to act synergistically or additively in rodents 13 , in monkeys (s.c. every 3 days) and in humans (continuous infusion) 14,42,43 . We dosed obese minipigs with a protracted PYY analogue 52, [Arg 4 , Gln 18 , Lys 30 ]PYY 3-36 , which had a fatty C18 diacid in position 30, in combination with the once-daily GLP-1 analogue, liraglutide, to validate the concept. In the run-in period of 16 weeks with dosing of liraglutide alone for both groups, we observed a reduction in food intake of approximately 65%. Starting on day 70, group one was dosed with liraglutide alone, while the other group was dosed with a combination of liraglutide and analogue 52. While group one receiving only liraglutide lost in total 8.5% in body weight after an additional 6 weeks of treatment, the group receiving the combination lost almost 20%. If the treatment period had been extended, potentially even greater losses may have been reached, thus confirming the great efficacy when combining GLP-1 and PYY for obesity treatment. Although we observe moderate potency on the Y 4 receptor (40 nM) for analogue 52, we do not believe that the observed additive effect in combination with liraglutide is also contributed by Y 4 receptor agonism, since we have observed even greater weight losses with other PYY analogues that do not bind to the Y 4 receptor (manuscript in preparation).
In conclusion, we have thoroughly investigated the effect of fatty diacid acylation of native PYY 3-36 with respect to half-life, albumin binding and receptor potency. We have shown that position and fatty diacid length, in combination with stabilization of the peptide backbone, are essential for obtaining sufficient potency and much longer half-lives in the minipig model beyond what has been described for other fatty diacid protracted analogues, such as the once-weekly dosed semaglutide. Peptides as pharmaceuticals have become of increasing interest the last couple of decades within a broad area of diseases like diabetes and obesity, but also within gastrointestinal disorders, inflammation, and cancer. Notably, using display technologies peptides as well as small protein scaffolds are becoming popular in the discovery of de novo compounds that could disrupt proteinprotein interactions (PPIs). We believe our observations provide valuable information with respect to the design of protracted peptides that would be of potential therapeutic value.

Methods
Where relevant all methods were carried out in accordance with relevant guidelines and regulations. The in vivo procedures were approved by the Danish Animal Experiments Inspectorate and in accordance with ARRIVE guidelines.

Peptide synthesis. The synthesis of individual peptides used for the in vitro assay and in vivo experiments
was done using Prelude instruments (Protein Technologies) Peptides were purified by preparative HPLC, except peptides used for the PK experiments which were synthesized in plate format using Intavis MultipepRS equipment and used as crude peptides. For details about synthesis, cleavage and purification of the peptides see Supplemental Information.
ACTOne functional potency assay. Assay principle: NPY Receptors are Gi-coupled seven trans-membrane receptors that signal through the cAMP-dependent pathway by inhibiting adenylate cyclase activity which results in a decrease of cAMP generation. The ACTOne assay is based on a modified calcium channel that has a selective binding site for cAMP, resulting in cellular calcium influx in presence of cAMP, detected by a calcium responsive dye. In order to measure decreased levels of cAMP, isoproterenol, a β1/β2-adrenoreceptor agonist, is added to activate adenylate cyclase and increase intracellular cAMP levels. Decreased cellular calcium concentrations, reflecting a decrease of cAMP due to YR activation, is detected as a decrease in fluorescence from the calcium sensitive dye. The human NPY receptors used in the assay are: Y 1 R UniProtKB: locus NPY1R_HUMAN, accession P25929, Y 2 R UniProtKB: locus NPY2R_HUMAN, accession P49146, Y 4 R UniProtKB: locus NPY4R_ HUMAN, accession P50391. Y 2 R membrane preparation: Cells were cultured in 500 cm 2 Nunclon dishes (Cat # 166508, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) and detached mechanically by scraping. Plates were washed in ice cold DPBS (Cat # 17-512F, Lonza) and cells were transferred to tubes and centrifuged for 5 min at 1000 g at 4ºC in a Heraeus Multifuge 3s (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Pellets were resuspended in ice cold Y 2 R homogenization buffer (20 mM HEPES, 5 mM MgCl 2 , 1 mg/ml Bacitracin, pH 7.1) and homogenized for 30 seconds using an Ultra-Turrax T25 homogenizer (IKA, Staufen, Germany) at medium speed. The homogenate was centrifuged at 35000 g (18000 rpm) using a Sorvall RC6+ ultracentrifuge (Thermo Fisher Scientific) with a Fiberlite F21-8x50 rotor for 15 minutes at 4°C and the supernatant was discarded. Homogenization of the pellet was repeated a total of three times in fresh Y 2 homogenization buffer. The final pellet was resuspended in Y 2 R homogenization buffer and protein concentration was determined and adjusted to 1 mg/ml with Y 2 R homogenization buffer. Protein concentration was determined by Bio-Rad protein assay kit II (Cat # 500-0002, Hercules, CA, USA).
Wheat germ agglutinin SPA beads (Cat # RPNQ 0001, PerkinElmer, Waltham, MA, USA) were reconstituted in Y 2 SPA buffer (50 mM HEPES, 1 mM CaCl 2 , 5 mM MgCl 2 , 0.02% Tween 20, 0.25% ovalbumin pH 7.4) and mixed with membrane preparation to give a final concentration of 0.5 mg SPA beads and 3 µg/well total protein Serially diluted PYY analogue in Y 2 R SPA buffer was added followed by 50.000 cpm per well of human Displacement of radio ligand was measured as reduction in light emission from SPA beads and pKi (human) or pIC 50 (mouse) values were calculated by nonlinear regression analysis of sigmoidal dose-response curves in GraphPad Prism (Graph Pad software 9.0.1, www. graph pad. com). All dose response measurements were performed in technical duplicates and data presented represents a minimum of 3 independently performed assays.
Cheng-Prusoff equation was used for pK i calculations Saturation binding: K d is the equilibrium binding constant which corresponds to the radio ligand concentration needed to achieve a half-maximum binding at equilibrium. Radio ligand human [ 125 I]-Peptide YY 1-36 (Cat # NEX3410, PerkinElmer) was used for Y 2 R saturation binding experiments. In order to calculate specific binding, saturation binding was performed with increasing concentrations of radio ligand for total binding and for nonspecific binding in the presence of 1 µM cold ligand. Cold ligand for Y 2 R was human PYY 3-36 . Calculation of K d was performed where nonspecific binding was subtracted from total binding to determine the specific binding and fitted in one site binding (hyperbola) equation. Three independent saturation binding experiments were performed for each NPY receptor type and K d values for each experiment were converted to pK d (-logK d ) followed by calculation of the mean pK d and thereafter converted back (10 -mean pKd ) to mean K d . Y 2 R K d = 275 pM.
Albumin binding affinity of fluorescently labelled peptides. The albumin binding affinity of 5(6)-Carboxytetramethylrhodamine (TAMRA)-labelled, acylated PYY compounds was measured in a fluorescence polarization assay. A 12-point dilution series of human (HSA; Cat # A3782, Sigma) or porcine serum albumin (PSA; Cat # A4414, Sigma) was titrated to a constant peptide concentration of 50 nM in 10 mM sodium phosphate, 140 mM NaCl, pH 7.4 or 20 mM MES, 150 mM NaCl, pH 6.0. Albumin compounds were purchased free from fatty acids (HSA); or, fatty acids were removed by treatment with activated charcoal (PSA) 44 . In this manner, all binding sites in albumin are free from fatty acids, and the assay determines peptide binding to the albumin site with the highest affinity. Samples were incubated for 2 h at room temperature and fluorescence polarization was measured in duplicate in a 384-well plate (Cat # 784900, Greiner) on a microplate reader (Spark, Tecan), using 535/25 nm and 595/35 nm excitation and emission filters, respectively (a second measurement after 20 h confirmed that equilibrium was reached in the 2 h measurement). The binding curve was fitted with a 1:1 binding isotherm in GraphPad Prism (Graph Pad software 9.0.1, www. graph pad. com), using the equation S = a x K D +x + b , with S the measured fluorescence polarization, b the fluorescence polarization signal of the unbound peptide, a the amplitude of the signal change, x the albumin concentration and K D the binding affinity. This treatment is warranted as the assay operates under pseudo-first order conditions (peptide concentration << K D ), where the free concentration of albumin can be equated to the total concentration of albumin. A non-acylated PYY analogue having an acetyl in place for the fatty diacid (analogue 61) was included as control and found not to exhibit any binding to albumin (see Supplementary Information).
In vivo pharmacokinetic (PK) evaluation in Göttingen Minipigs. Animals and housing. Male Göttingen Minipigs with a body weight (BW) ranging from 10 to 25 kg (Ellegaard Minipigs, Dalmose, Denmark) were used for PK evaluations since this species has been shown to be a valid model for prediction of human PK 45 . The animals were either group-housed or single-housed depending on the presence of permanent centralvenous catheters in the animal unit at Novo Nordisk A/S or BioAdvice A/S. They were housed in a 12 h light cycle and were allowed minimum 2 weeks of acclimatization before study start. They had wood shavings and/or straw as bedding material and were fed standard minipig chow with free access to water. In some animals, two permanent central-venous catheters were surgically implanted in the caudal caval vein according to previously described principles 46 . The number of animals used for these studies was based on previous experience with PK experiments performed in Göttingen Minipigs.
Administration of peptide formulations. The animals were fasted overnight prior to dosing but had ad libitum access to water. Each animal received an IV injection of 2-6 analogues in one formulation (3-4 animals per formulation, 15 nmol/kg of each analogue), given either through a venflon placed in the ear vein in briefly restrained pigs or through one of the IV catheters, which was flushed with minimum 10 ml of sterile saline post administration. The test substances were formulated in either 10 mM NaHPO 4 , 150 mM NaCl, 0.01% Tween 20, pH 4.0 or 50 mM Na 2 HPO 4 , 145 mM NaCl, 0.05% Tween 80, pH 7.4 and were dosed in a volume of 0.1-0.15 ml/kg. Blood sampling. Blood samples (0.8 ml) were taken either from the jugular vein using vacutainer or from the IV catheter not used for dosing according to one of the following schedules: Predose, and 5, 15 (8 mM) and 50 µl stabilization buffer (3.097 g K 3 EDTA dissolved in 50 ml aprotinin Trasylol ® , 10,000 KIE/ml) and added 0.5 ml 20 mM valine-pyrrolidide (prepared at Novo Nordisk A/S); pH regulated to 7.4). Samples were kept on wet ice until centrifugation (10 min, www.nature.com/scientificreports/ 4 °C, 1500-2000g). Afterwards, plasma was transferred to Micronic tubes and kept at -20 °C until analysis. The plasma samples were analysed by LC/MS as described below. Plasma concentration-time profiles were analysed by a non-compartmental pharmacokinetics analysis using Phoenix WinNonlin v. 5.0 (Pharsight Inc., Mountain View, CA, USA). Calculations were performed using individual concentration-time values from each animal, and minimum 3 data points were used for estimation of terminal half-life.
Subchronic in vivo efficacy study in obese Göttingen Minipigs. Obese, female ovariectomised Göttingen Minipigs (Göttingen Minipigs, Dalmose, Denmark) weighing 101 ±14 kg (range:78-130 kg) were used to evaluate the weight lowering effect of treatment with PYY analogue 52 in combination with the GLP-1 analogue liraglutide. The obese minipig model, with an overweight of more than 100%, is suitable for this type of study due to a large treatment window compared to rodents, which is essential for evaluation of the full weight lowering potential of a combination treatment. The pigs were single-housed in pens of at least 4 m 2 floor area, with wood shavings and straw as bedding material and a 12 h light cycle. The pigs were fed ad libitum on Altromin 9023 (Brogaarden, Denmark) and had free access to water. After a baseline period of 2 weeks, all pigs were treated for a period of 16 weeks with liraglutide (190 nmol/pig given subcutaneously (SC) once daily), and during the last 6 weeks of this period, add-on treatment with either the PYY analogue 52 in a dose of 100 nmol/kg or vehicle was given twice weekly. The study was approved by the Danish Animal Experiments Inspectorate. The number of animals used was based on previous experience with appetite-regulating compounds in this model.
Quantitative assay for plasma samples. The PYY analogues from cassette dosing studies were quantified in plasma samples by LC/MS/MS. The selectivity of the method allowed multiple analogues to be quantified in the same plasma sample. Calibration curves were constructed by spiking PYY analogues to blank plasma and method performance was accepted based on standard curves and quality control samples in duplicate at three concentration levels. The typical dynamic range of the assay was 1 -2,000 nmol/l. The sample preparation was as follows: 40 µl of EDTA plasma was added to 160 µl of 50% methanol containing 1% formic acid, then vortexed and centrifuged at 14300 rpm (16457 g) at 4 ºC for 20 minutes. The supernatant was transferred to a 96 well plate and the injection volume was 25 µl. For sample clean-up procedure, a TurboFlow Cyclone column (0.5 × 50 mm) from Thermo Scientific, Franklin, MA, USA, was used and the chromatographic separation was performed on an Onyx C18 column (2.0 × 50 mm) from Phenomenex (Torrance, CA, USA). Mobile phases were composed of combinations of methanol, acetonitrile, Milli-Q water and formic acid. Selective detection of PYY analogues by multiple reaction monitoring was performed on a API3000 mass spectrometer from Sciex (ON, Canada) that was operated in positive ionization mode.