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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
[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.