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Vol. 281, Issue 2, 817-825, 1997
Departments of Pharmacology (S.A.T., T.J.A., V.S.H., T.J.G., T.P.D.) and Chemistry (J.Z., V.J.H.), The University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona
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Abstract |
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[D-Ala2]deltorphins are enzymatically stable,
amphibian heptapeptides that have a higher affinity and selectivity for
delta-opioid receptors than any endogenous mammalian
compound known. This study investigated the in vitro
blood-brain barrier permeability, using primary bovine brain
microvessel endothelium culture, and the resistance to enzymatic
degradation, in mouse 15% brain membrane homogenates and 100% plasma,
of [D-Ala2]deltorphin I,
[D-Ala2]deltorphin II and several analogues.
Derivatives were designed with the addition of N-terminal neutral and
basic amino acids or with alterations of the amino acids present within
the deltorphin sequences. The results indicated that the N-terminal
sequence and the amino acids in position 4 and 5 are critical to
deltorphin analogue BBB permeability and biological stability,
i.e., t1/2 brain; 4.8 hr-
[D-Ala2]deltorphin I; >15 hr-
[D-Ala2,Ser4,D-Ala5]deltorphin.
Although, no analogue was found to increase the BBB permeability
coefficient (PC; ×10
4 cm/min) of the parent compounds
([D-Ala2]deltorphin II, PC = 23.49 ± 2.42) analogues were identified: [Arg0,D-Ala2]deltorphin II,
PC = 19.06 ± 3.73 and
[Pro
1,Pro0,D-Ala2]deltorphin
II, PC = 22.22 ± 5.93; which had similar permeability coefficients, even though they had larger molecular weights and, in the
case of the cationic pro-drug, a significantly lower lipophilicity. These analogues provide directions in the development of future pro-drugs for the treatment of pain and this study further clarifies the structure-activity relationship of the deltorphins.
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Introduction |
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Deltorphins are linear
heptapeptides that are secreted from the skin glands of
Phyllomedusa amphibians and have a higher affinity and
selectivity for delta opioid binding sites than any other endogenous compound known (Kreil et al., 1989
; Erspamer
et al., 1989
; Lazarus et al., 1996
). Although the
first deltorphin to be discovered, deltorphin A, has a significantly
different sequence than [D-Ala2]deltorphin I
or II, it does share a common N-terminus tripeptide sequence,
H-Tyr-D-Xaa-Phe (table 1), and similar
delta-opioid receptor selectivity (Kreil et al.,
1989
). In contrast to the endogenous mammalian opioid peptides, which
have the common N-terminus tetrapeptide sequence Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe, the
deltorphins are more stable in biological fluids (Kramer et
al., 1991
) and this can be partly related to the naturally
occurring D-amino acid in position 2, the source of which
is unknown (Marastoni et al., 1991
). The deltorphins and
their analogues are of considerable scientific interest because they
have the potential to be used either as effective therapeutic tools
against acute and chronic pain and/or in the further elucidation of the
structure-activity relationships of delta-opioid receptor
agonists (Jiang et al., 1990
; Lazarus et al.,
1996
).
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It is thought that delta-opioid analgesia is a centrally
mediated event. Therefore only those opioids that can cross the (BBB) intact will be able to elicit a biological effect (Frederickson et al., 1981
; Shook et al., 1987
). Thus an
essential consideration in the design and development of opioid
analgesics is their ability to cross the BBB and their resistance to
enzymatic degradation in biological fluids. Our research group has
designed several series of deltorphin derivatives either with
alterations of the amino acids present within the peptide sequence or
with additions of neutral and basic amino acids to the N-terminus
toward these ends. In vitro cultures of cerebral endothelial
cells and time-course metabolism studies in brain membrane homogenates
and plasma allow rapid assessment of the potential BBB permeability and
metabolism of drugs (Weber et al., 1993
; Brownson et
al., 1994
; Greene et al., 1996
). The scope of our study
was to investigate the in vitro BBB permeability and
stability of [D-Ala2]deltorphin analogues,
together with their parent compounds, using the methods outlined above
and to identify the best possible drug candidate(s) for clinical
nociceptive pain management as well as furthering our knowledge of the
structural requirements necessary for biological effects.
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Methods |
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In Vitro BBB (BMEC)
The in vitro BBB model uses primary cultures of
bovine BMEC (Audus and Borchardt, 1986
; Weber et al., 1993
).
Briefly, isolated brain microvessels were seeded (50,000 cells/cm2) onto a tissue culture dish that had been
precoated with rat tail collagen and fibronectin and contained 25-mm
Costar Nucleopore polycarbonate membrane filters (10 µm; Costar
Corp., Cambridge, MA). After the cells had grown to confluence (12-14
days), the membrane filters plus the confluent monolayer were moved
into the center of a Side-Bi-Side diffusion chamber (Crown Glass Co., Sommerville, NJ), which contained 3 ml of the physiological assay buffer (NaCl 122.0 mM; KCl 3.0 mM; MgSO4 1.2 mM;
NaHCO3 25.0 mM; K2HPO4 0.4 mM;
CaCl2 1.4 mM; D-glucose 10 mM; HEPES 10 mM) at 37°C. At time zero the test drug, together with a membrane impermeant marker, [14C]sucrose (0.44 Ci/mmol; NEN Research
Products, Boston, MA), was added to the donor chamber and 200-µl
samples were taken from the receiver chamber at 0, 15, 30, 60, 90 and
120 min. An equal volume of assay buffer was added to the receiver
chamber to replace that removed. A 200-µl sample was also taken from
the donor chamber at time 0 and 120 min. An equivalent volume of
acetonitrile-water (v/v, 50/50) was added to each sample and the
samples stored at
40°C until use. Background leakiness was
monitored and corrected for by determining the levels of
[14C]sucrose in the samples via scintillation
spectrometry (efficiency 93% for 14C; Beckman LS 5000 TD
counter, Beckman Instruments Inc., Fullerton, CA). Control studies
confirmed that the passage of [14C]sucrose across
collagen- and fibronectin-coated membrane filters without the BMEC
monolayers was significantly higher than filters with BMEC monolayers
(P < .01).
Passage of the test solute across the in vitro BBB monolayer was determined by RP-HPLC analysis of the samples, as described below, and was expressed in the form of a PC. This was calculated by means of the following equation:
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3 (CD
remains >90% of the initial value over the time of the experiments). Data points collected at times 60, 90 and 120 min were used to compute
the apparent permeability coefficients.
In Vitro Stability Incubations
The effect of both brain membrane-associated and plasma enzymes
on the degradation of the test compounds was examined over a period of
5 hr at 37°C as previously described (Davis and Culling-Berglund, 1985
; Weber et al., 1992
).
Preparation of brain membranes and plasma.
Adult ICR male
mice (25-30 g) were anaesthetized (sodium pentobarbital; 80 mg/kg) and
blood collected from the abdominal aorta with a heparinized syringe.
The blood was left overnight at 4°C and then centrifuged for 20 min
at 20,000 × g. The plasma/supernatant was then removed
and stored at
40°C. Twice-washed membranes were prepared from whole
brain minus cerebellum as previously described by Gillespie et
al. (1992)
and were resuspended in 50 mM Tris buffer to a final
protein concentration of 7 mg/ml and stored at
40°C until use. The
protein content of the suspension was confirmed by the Folin-Lowry
procedure (Lowry et al., 1951
).
Incubations.
The time course of metabolism was investigated
by incubating the plasma or brain membrane homogenates with 100 µM
test compound at 37°C for 0, 60, 120, 180 and 300 min. If the test
peptide was found to have a half-life less than 60 min, incubations
were performed using time intervals of 0, 7.5, 15, 22.5 and 30 min.
After incubation an equal volume of acetonitrile was added and the
samples were vortexed before being kept on ice for a few minutes.
Samples were further diluted 1:1 with 0.5% acetic acid to prevent any
enzymatic degradation not stopped by the addition of the acetonitrile
and centrifuged at 13,000 × g for 15 min. The
supernatants were collected and frozen at
40°C until analyzed by
RP-HPLC as described below. The half-life of the test compounds was
calculated via linear regression analysis of percentage of recovery
vs. time (Tallarida and Murray, 1987
).
HPLC analysis.
Both stability and BMEC samples were analyzed
by a RP-HPLC system consisting of a Waters Associates WISP 712 Autoinjector (Waters Associates, Milford MA), Perkin Elmer Binary LC
pump 250 and LC-15 UV Detector (210 nm; Perkin Elmer, Norwalk, CT),
Hewlett-Packard 3396A Integrator (Hewlett-Packard Co., Avondale, PA)
and a Vydac 218TP54 column (4.6 × 250 mm; Vydac Hesperia, CA) or
an Inertsil ODS-2 µm column (4.6 × 150 mm; Metachem
Technologies Inc., Torrance CA) as previously described by Davis
(1990)
. Samples were eluted using a linear gradient (10-30, 0-30 or
5-25% in 30 min) of acetonitrile vs. 0.1M
NaH2PO4 (pH 2.4) at 1.5 ml/min at 37°C.
[Ala
1,Pro0,D-Ala2]deltorphin
II,
[Pro
1,Pro0,D-Ala2]deltorphin
II and
[Abu
1,Abu0,D-Ala2]deltorphin
II were eluted using a linear gradient of 10 to 30% acetonitrile
versus 0.1M NaH2PO4 (pH 7.4) at 2 ml/min at
37°C and a Zorbax Pro-10/300 column (4.6 × 250 mm; Du Pont,
Wilmington, DE).
for each of the test compounds.
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Peptide Synthesis
All the [D-Ala2]deltorphin analogues
were synthesized by the solid phase technique with BOP/HOBt mediated
Fmoc strategy and using a Rink amide p-methylbenzhydrylamine
resin [0.56 mmol/g Novabiochem (La Jolla, CA)]. The protected amino
acids were purchased from Advanced ChemTech (Louisville, KY) or Bachem
(Torrance, CA). The side chain protecting groups were Boc for Lys, Pmc
for Arg and tert-butyl for Ser, Glu and Tyr. After incorporation of all the amino acids the N-terminal Fmoc group was removed and the resin was
washed several times and dried in a vacuum desiccator. The side-chain
protected peptidyl resin was treated with a mixture of TFA/phenol/water
(90:5:5), 10 ml/g peptidyl resin, for 120 min at ambient temperature.
The resin was filtered off and the filtrate was concentrated in
vacuo. The peptide was precipitated with anhydrous ether,
collected by centrifugation and washed several times with ether. The
peptide was dissolved in acetic acid-water and lyophilized. The crude
peptide was purified by preparative RP-HPLC as previously reported
(Misicka et al., 1994
). All the peptides synthesized had a
purity of more than 95% as measured by RP-HPLC analysis
(Hewlett-Packard model 1090 monitored at 222, 256 and 278 nm) and gave
satisfactory fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry spectra.
Chemicals
[D-Ala2]deltorphin I and II were supplied by Multiple Peptide Systems (San Diego, CA) under the direction of the National Institute on Drug Abuse. All other reagents were obtained from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO).
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Results |
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In vitro BBB. The in vitro BBB permeability measured in the form of a PC for all the test compounds was summarized in table 2. HPLC analyses revealed that the 120-min receiver and donor chamber samples eluted as a single peak, that had the same retention time as the reference sample, not exposed to the monolayer, taken at 0 min. Thus these PC values do represent the passage of intact peptide across the BMEC monolayer. Further control experiments confirmed that the PC of the test analogues was related to their ability to freely cross the BMEC monolayer and not their ability to bind to the walls of the glass diffusion chambers and/or the polycarbonate filter membranes. The PC determined for each compound were compared to each other by analysis of variance coupled with the Newman-Keuls test (table 3). The BBB passage of [D-Ala2]deltorphin II, which had one of the highest PC values, and [D-Ala2,Gln4,D-Val5]deltorphin, which had one of the lowest PC values, can be seen in figure 1A and illustrates the range of values determined from these in vitro studies, as well as the linearity of passage over the 120-min experimental time period (table 2).
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Capacity factors.
The lipophilicity of the test compounds was
measured in the form of a k determined from the HPLC
retention times (table 2). [D-Ala2,Ser4,D-Val5]deltorphin
and
[D-Ala2,Gln4,D-Val5]deltorphin
had similar capacity factors and were among the most lipophillic of all
the compounds tested.
[Arg
1,Arg0,D-Ala2]deltorphin
and
[Lys
1,Lys0,D-Ala2]deltorphin
also had similar capacity factors to each other, but of all the
compounds tested they were the least lipophillic (table 2). Figure 1b
illustrates the relationship between permeability coefficient and
capacity factor and as can be seen the permeability coefficients
determined for most of the
[D-Ala2]deltorphins increase with
lipophilicity. However, four analogues have much lower PCs than would
be predicted from their capacity factor and they are
[D-Ala2,Ser4,D-Val5]-,
[D-Ala2,Gln4,D-Val5]-,
[D-Ala2,Gln4,D-Ala5]-
and [Lys0,D-Ala2]-deltorphin II.
In vitro stability.
Table 2 also summarizes the
half-lives determined for all the test compounds in 100% mouse plasma
and twice washed 15% mouse brain membrane homogenate. The percent
recovery of intact [D-Ala2]deltorphin I and
II in both brain membrane homogenate and plasma was plotted as a
function of time in Figure 2A and B, respectively. Although both [D-Ala2]deltorphin I and II had
long half-lives, several of their analogues were much more resistant to
in vitro degradation, for example [D-Ala2,Ser4,D-Val5]deltorphin
(fig. 3). In contrast, the cationic analogues and the
proline- and
-aminobutyric acid-containing analogues, had much
shorter half-lives (table 2) and it was possible to plot their in
vitro conversion to [D-Ala2]deltorphin
II in both matrices (figs. 4 and 5). The
degradation of
[Arg
1,Arg0,D-Ala2]-,
[Lys
1,Lys0,D-Ala2]-
and
[Abu
1,Abu0,D-Ala2]-deltorphin
II, involved the formation of
[Arg0,D-Ala2]-,
[Lys0,D-Ala2]- or
[Abu0,D-Ala2]-deltorphin II,
respectively, as well as [D-Ala2]deltorphin
II (fig. 4). However, the degradation of the proline-containing analogues involved the direct formation of the parent compound by
cleavage of the N-terminal dipeptide sequence (fig. 5). The peaks for
each compound were identified from the retention times determined for
the relevant standards (fig. 6).
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Discussion |
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A systematic screening of the in vitro BBB permeability
and biological stability of
[D-Ala2]deltorphin I and II and their
analogues was undertaken to determine the potential of these compounds
as clinical analgesics and to further clarify the structure-activity
relationships of delta-opioid agonists. This study revealed
that even though several deltorphin analogues had BBB permeability
coefficients similar to the parent compounds and warrant further study,
there was no analogue that had a significantly higher ability to cross
the in vitro BBB (table 3). In fact, both
[D-Ala2]deltorphin I and II had significantly
higher PC values compared to the majority of the analogues (table 2). A
150-fold difference between in vivo and in vitro
values for drugs that cross the BBB via lipid mediation has been
observed (Pardridge et al., 1990
). Although, the ability of
most of the [D-Ala2]deltorphin analogues to
cross the in vitro BBB would appear to be dependent on
lipophilicity (fig. 1b), it is possible that a saturable transport
system is involved. Saturable transport systems have previously been
identified for the passage of opioid pentapeptides across the BBB
(Zlokovic et al., 1989
; Williams et al., 1996
).
[D-Ala2,Gln4]deltorphin and
[D-Ala2,Ser4]deltorphin were
developed to explore the topograhical requirements for
delta-opioid receptor ligands (Misicka et al.,
1991
). Interestingly, neither the amidation of the
-carboxyl groups
of [Glu4]
([D-Ala2,Gln4]deltorphin) nor the
replacement of a
-carboxyl group with a hydroxyl group
([D-Ala2,Ser4]deltorphin)
significantly reduce the
-opioid potency of
[D-Ala2]deltorphin I and II (Misicka et
al., 1991
). However, amidation does enhance mu receptor
affinities by 2.5- to 12-fold (Lazarus et al., 1991
;
Salvadori et al., 1991
) and it is thought that the negative
charge of the glutamic or aspartic acid residue in the C-terminal
"address" domain of deltorphin is primarily responsible for
-selectivity (Melchiorri et al., 1991
; Salvadori et
al., 1991
; Bryant et al., 1993
), by preventing µ-site
recognition and binding (Lazarus et al., 1991
; Sagan
et al., 1992
). Similarly, receptor binding studies indicate
that [D-Ala2,Ala5]deltorphin II
maintains the high
-affinity of the parent compound, although
decreasing the
-selectivity due to an increase in µ-affinity (Sasaki et al., 1991
; Salvadori et al., 1991
;
Nikiforovich and Hruby, 1990
).
[D-Ala2,Gln4,D-Val5]-
and
[D-Ala2,Gln4,D-Ala5]deltorphin
are analogues in which the acidic side chain at position 4 has been
replaced by a neutral, amide moiety. Additionally, in
[D-Ala2,Gln4,D-Ala5]deltorphin,
the lipophilic Val5 residue of the natural peptide has been
replaced by the much less lipophilic, D-alanine. Although,
the
-opioid binding affinity of analogues 3, 4, 5 and 6 has not been
determined, based on the previously discussed studies, which found that
similar alterations in positions 4 or 5 does not alter
-opioid
binding affinity, it is assumed that these analogues maintain the high
-opioid potency of the parent compound. It is of considerable
interest that
[D-Ala2,Gln4,D-Val5]-
and
[D-Ala2,Gln4,D-Ala5]-deltorphin
have similar BBB PCs even though their lipophilicities, as measured by
capacity factors, were different (fig. 1B). Furthermore, the in
vitro BBB permeabilities of
[D-Ala2,Ser4,D-Val5]-
and
[D-Ala2,Ser4,D-Ala5]-deltorphin
were also not different from each other, in contrast to their
capacity factors (fig. 1B). Although, the differences in permeability
between analogues 3 and 4 and analogues 5 and 6 did not attain
statistical significance, the patterns produced suggest that a smaller
molecular size and the presence of a hydroxyl group vs.
amidation at the side chain in position 4, may contribute to increased
BBB permeability. This group of
[D-Ala2]deltorphin analogues (analogues 3, 4, 5 and 6) had significantly lower permeability coefficients when
compared to either [D-Ala2]deltorphin I or II
(table 3). This result also indicates the importance of the amino acid
in position 4 and possibly an L-isomer in position 5. It must be
considered that the low in vitro BBB permeability observed
for the serine4 analogues of
[D-Ala2]deltorphin may reflect an inability
to exit from brain-to-blood and may explain the 1.4-fold more
potent antinociception of intracerebroventricular administered
[D-Ala2,Ser4]deltorphin when
compared to [D-Ala2]deltorphin II (Horan
et al., 1993
).
Pro-drugs were developed as site-directed chemotherapeutic agents
against malignant tumors (Carl, 1983), but they are now used to
overcome the cellular barriers that prevent drug delivery to certain
organ systems (Pardridge, 1991
; Bodor et al., 1992
). Both
[D-Ala2]deltorphin I and II have a higher
affinity for delta receptors than dermenkephalin
(Erspamer et al., 1989
) and
[D-Ala2]deltorphin II is the most selective
natural delta opioid receptor agonist currently available
(Jiang et al., 1990
; Bryant et al., 1993
). Thus
the pro-drugs in table 2 were based on the parent compound,
[D-Ala2]deltorphin II. Previous studies have
shown that cationization can improve the central nervous system entry
of peptides (Van Deurs et al., 1989
; Griffin and Giffels,
1982
; Kumagai et al., 1987
). This is related to the presence
of anionic sites on the endothelial cell membranes of the BBB
(Vorbrodt, 1989
) and the ability of cationized molecules to use
absorptive-mediated endocytosis to cross the BBB (Kumagai et
al., 1987
; Terasaki et al., 1989
; Shimura et
al., 1991
). In our study one group of potential pro-drugs (analogues 7, 8, 9 and 10) was developed to improve on the ability of
the parent compounds to cross the BBB by cationization. However, except
for the analogue,
[Arg0,D-Ala2]deltorphin II,
cationization significantly decreased the ability of the parent
compound to cross the in vitro BBB (table 3). This result is most
likely due to the increased molecular size and decreased lipophilicity
associated with the cationic amino acid additions to the N-terminus of
[D-Ala2]deltorphin II (table 2; fig. 1B). The
similar PC value for
[Arg0,D-Ala2]- and
[D-Ala2]-deltorphin II, in contrast to
[Lys0,D-Ala2]deltorphin, is
possibly related to the more polycationic nature of arginine versus
lysine. Although, the lower permeability coefficients of the analogues
7 and 9, would appear to dispute this explanation. Thus, it is likely
that the BBB permeability of these cationized pro-drugs reflects a
balance between their ionic nature, molecular weight and lipophilicity.
It must be noted that opioid peptides that carry a net positive charge
show mu receptor preference, whereas neutral and negatively
charged peptides preferentially interact with the delta
receptor site (Salvadori et al., 1991
). Lipophilicity would
also appear to play a role in the similarity of the PCs observed for
the proline- and
-aminobutyric acid-containing analogues (11, 12 and
13) compared to [D-Ala2]deltorphin II, their
-helical structure ensuring a high hydrophobicity (table 2).
Our study also confirmed the inherent stability of
[D-Ala2]deltorphin I and II in both 15%
mouse brain membrane homogenate and 100% mouse plasma (fig. 2), which
had previously been observed in membrane homogenates and synaptosomal
membrane fractions prepared from rat brains (Erspamer et
al., 1989
; Marastoni et al., 1991
; Horan et
al., 1993
; Sasaki et al., 1994
). As mentioned in the introduction, this resistance to enzymatic degradation is partially related to the presence of the D-isomer of alanine in
position 2 (Erspamer et al., 1989
), which prevents
cleavage by aminopeptidases, but may also be related to the presence of
the C-terminal amide, which is known to protect against
carboxypeptidases (Moss, 1995
). Furthermore, deltorphin I and II
analogues containing D-alanine at position 2 possess
greater antinociceptive properties than their corresponding isomers
containing L-alanine (Ji et al., 1995
). It is
thought that the presence of amino acids branched at the
-carbon
atom or with a bulky side chain at residue 5 (i.e., Val of
[D-Ala2]deltorphin I and II) is important for
enzymatic stability, with [D-Ala2,Ala5]deltorphin II being
readily degraded in a rat brain synaptosomal membrane fraction by
neprilysin (neutral endopeptidase; EC3.4.24.11) (Sasaki et
al., 1994
). Furthermore,
[D-Ala2,Ser4]deltorphin II has
been shown to have a shorter half-life in rat brain membrane homogenate
than [D-Ala2]deltorphin II (Horan et
al., 1993
). Thus, in this study it is likely that the extremely
long half-lives observed for the
[D-Ala2]deltorphin analogues, 3, 4, 5 and 6 (table 2), are due to the presence of the D-isomer of
either valine or alanine in position 5 protecting the peptide against
neprilysin and possibly angiotensin converting enzyme (EC3.4.15.1)
activity (Sasaki et al., 1994
; Waters et al.,
1996
). It must be noted that neprilysin and ACE are present in brain
(Dauch et al., 1993
) and ACE is present in cerebral
microvessels and plasma (Shibanoki et al., 1991
; Brownson et al., 1994
). Another potential cleavage site in
[D-Ala2]deltorphin I and II is likely to be
the Phe-Asp or Phe-Glu bond by metalloendopeptidase 24.15 (Mentlein and
Dahms, 1994
; Waters et al., 1996
), which is found
heterogenously distributed in brain (Dauch et al., 1993
),
but in contrast to neprilysin, is predominately a cytosolic enzyme
(Dahms and Mentlein, 1992
).
Proline-containing peptide sequences are conformationally constrained
and therefore resistant to common proteinases, but easily degraded by
proline-specific proteinases (Mentlein, 1988
; Vanhoof et
al., 1995
). Dipeptidyl aminopeptidase IV (EC3.4.14.5) is a
membrane protease associated with the metabolic barrier function of the
cerebral microvessels (Schnabel et al., 1992
; Brust et al., 1994
) and is evenly distributed throughout the brain (Dauch et al., 1993
) and is present in high concentrations in serum
(Mentlein et al., 1993b
). It degrades endogenous peptides,
such as substance P, by liberating dipeptides with proline or alanine
adjacent to the aminoterminus (Kato et al., 1978
; Mentlein
et al., 1993a
). However, the optimal substrates for its
action are peptides having a N-terminal dipeptide sequence containing
-aminobutyric acid in the penultimate position (Bongers et
al., 1992
). Thus our research group developed proline- and
-aminobutyric acid-containing analogues with the aim of producing
potential [D-Ala2]deltorphin pro-drugs that
were protected against nonspecific N-terminal degradation and could be
specifically cleaved to form the active parent compound at the BBB.
Table 2 shows that this series of pro-drugs were relatively rapidly
degraded in the 15% brain membrane homogenate and 100% plasma when
compared to their parent compound,
[D-Ala2]deltorphin II. Interestingly, both
[Ala
1,Pro0,D-Ala2]deltorphin
and
[Pro
1,Pro0,D-Ala2]deltorphin
had longer half-lives in brain membrane homogenate compared to plasma
(table 2) and this might be related to the presence of aminopeptidase P
(EC3.4.11.9) in plasma, which releases N-terminal amino acids from
sequences with a penultimate proline residue (Ahmad and Ward, 1992
;
Checler, 1993
; Brownlees and Williams, 1995
; Vanhoof et al.,
1995
).
Figure 4 illustrates the degradation of the cationized pro-drug,
[Lys
1,Lys0,D-Ala2]deltorphin
II and its in vitro conversion to
[Lys0,D-Ala2]deltorphin II and
[D-Ala2]deltorphin II. The enzymes likely to
be responsible for the degradation of the cationic peptides in table 2
are aminopeptidase M (EC3.4.11.2), B (EC3.4.11.6) and MII.
Aminopeptidase M has a broad substrate specificity affecting numerous
peptides (Palmieri et al., 1985
), although aminopeptidase B
and MII exhibit a specificity for N-terminal basic amino acids
(Checler, 1993
). Both aminopeptidase M and B are found in
high concentrations throughout murine brain (Dauch et al.,
1993
) and aminopeptidase M is also highly concentrated in cerebral
microvessels (Churchill et al., 1987
; Schnabel et al., 1992
) and plasma (Shibanoki et al., 1991
). The
faster degradation of the cationic peptides in brain membrane
homogenate compared to plasma suggests the presence of differing
aminopeptidase concentrations in these two matrices and may be due, at
least in part, to the observed absence of aminopeptidase MII in rat
serum and plasma (McLellan et al., 1988
; Shibanoki et
al., 1991
).
The potential pro-drugs (analogues 7-13) all show a relatively rapid
cleavage of their N-terminal additions (table 2), which is essential
because the N-terminal tripeptide sequence
(H-Tyr1-D-Xaa2-Phe3) is
a structural requirement of the type II
-turn that appears to be
critical for receptor binding of deltorphin (Salvadori et al., 1993
). The deltorphin analogues containing the
arginine-arginine, lysine-lysine or
-aminobutyric acid dipeptide
sequences were cleaved to form
[Arg0,D-Ala2]-,
[Lys0,D-Ala2]- or
[Abu0,D-Ala2]-, deltorphin II,
respectively, followed by a further degradation step to form
[D-Ala2]deltorphin II (fig. 4). This is in
sharp contrast to the proline-containing pro-drugs that appeared to
directly form [D-Ala2]deltorphin II by
cleavage of the N-terminal dipeptide sequence (fig. 5). Therefore,
these in vitro stability results confirm that aminopeptidase
M, with its broad specificity, is not capable of cleaving a proline
peptide bond, i.e., Ala-Pro or Pro-Pro of analogues 11 and
12 (Mentlein, 1988
), but can cleave the bond between an
-aminobutyric acid dipeptide sequence. These results would also
confirm the presence of a dipeptide-cleaving peptidase in both brain
and plasma, which is responsible for the degradation of the
proline-containing pro-drugs. Furthermore, the shorter half-lives in
brain membrane homogenate for the cationic and the
-aminobutyric
acid-containing pro-drugs compared to the proline-containing pro-drugs
may be related to the higher concentration of aminopeptidase M
vs. dipeptidyl peptidase IV in the mouse brain (Schnabel
et al., 1992
). Although the shorter half-lives in the plasma
for the proline-containing analogues compared to the cationic pro-drugs would suggest that the higher concentration of aminopeptidase M
vs. dipeptidyl peptidase IV in this matrix is not
responsible for this result (Schnabel et al., 1992
).
However, this observation may reflect the presence of aminopeptidase P
in plasma (Ahmad and Ward, 1992
).
Structure-activity studies have suggested that the deltorphins are
similar to other peptide hormones (Schwyzer, 1986
), in that they have
two distinct proximal regions, which confer specific attributes to the
peptide; a N-terminal "message" domain that defines biological
responsiveness and a C-terminal "address" domain that influences
binding affinities for a specific receptor type (Sagan et
al., 1989a
; 1989b
; Portoghese, 1989
; Misicka et al., 1991
; 1994
). Our study would also appear to indicate that the N-terminal sequence and the amino acids in position 4 and 5 are important in the ability of these deltorphin analogues to cross the
in vitro BBB and in their resistance to enzymatic
degradation in biological fluids. Although, no
[D-Ala2]deltorphin analogue was found to
increase the BBB permeability of the parent compounds, analogues were
identified, [Arg0,D-Ala2]-,
[Ala
1,Pro0,D-Ala2]-,
[Pro
1,Pro0,D-Ala2]-
and
[Abu
1,Abu0,D-Ala2]-deltorphin
II, which had similar permeability coefficients even though they had
larger molecular weights and, in the case of the cationic pro-drug, a
significantly lower lipophilicity. Thus these analogues provide
directions in the development of
[D-Ala2]deltorphin drugs for the alleviation
of pain and this study further clarifies the structure-activity
relationship of [D-Ala2]deltorphin I and II,
in terms of in vitro BBB permeability and biological
stability.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
The authors thank Drs. Dinesh Patel and Shubh Sharma for the design and synthesis of several analogues. S.A.T. thanks The Wellcome Trust, London, UK for travel support. Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of NIDA.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Accepted for publication January 15, 1997.
Received for publication October 15, 1996.
1 This work was supported by NIDA DA-06284.
2 Current address: Sherrington School of Physiology, UMDS St. Thomas Hospital Campus, Lambeth Palace Road, London SE1 7EH, United Kingdom.
Send reprint requests to: Dr. Thomas P. Davis, Department of Pharmacology, University of Arizona, 1609 N. Warren St., Tucson, AZ 85724.
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
BBB, blood-brain barrier;
BMEC, brain
microvessel endothelial cells;
PC, permeability coefficient;
RP-HPLC, reverse phase high-performance liquid chromatography;
k
, capacity factor;
Abu,
-aminobutyric acid;
HOBt, N-hydroxybenzotriazole;
BOP, benzotriazol-1-yl-oxy-tris-dimethylamino-phosphonium;
TFA, trifluroacetic acid.
| |
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