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Vol. 293, Issue 1, 151-158, April 2000
-Methyl-2',6'-dimethyltyrosine1]-Substituted Cyclic
[D-Pen2,D-Pen5]Enkephalin
and [D-Ala2,Asp4]Deltorphin
Analogs1
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Northern Colorado,
Greeley, Colorado (E.J.B.); and Departments of Pharmacology (F.P.) and
Chemistry (X.Q., V.J.H.), The University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona
Research in our laboratories involves the development of selective
opioid agonists and antagonists as: 1) pharmacological tools to
elucidate the mechanisms of opioid antinociception, and 2) potential
analgesics that possess therapeutic advantages over currently available
drugs. We hypothesized that the selectivity of peptide agonists toward
the opioid receptor types and subtypes is topographically dependent.
The current results assess the antinociceptive activity and opioid
receptor selectivity of a series of
-methyl-2',6'-dimethyltyrosine (TMT)-substituted cyclic
[D-Pen2,D-Pen5]enkephalin
(DPDPE) and
[D-Ala2,Asp4]deltorphin (DELT
I) analogs. Compounds were injected via the intracerebroventricular route into male ICR mice, and antinociception was assessed using the 55°C warm water tail-flick test.
Antinociceptive A50 values ranged from 0.35 to 17 nmol for
the DELT I analogs and from 7.05 to >100 nmol for the DPDPE analogs.
To test for receptor selectivity, mice were treated with selective µ-
and
-opioid antagonists. In general, µ [
-funaltrexamine
(
-FNA)]- and
1
([D-Ala2,Leu5,Cys6] enkephalin)-antagonists
blocked the antinociceptive actions of [TMT1]DPDPE
analogs, whereas the antinociceptive actions of
[TMT1]DELT I analogs were more sensitive to antagonism by
the
2-selective antagonist
[Cys4]deltorphin and the µ-antagonist
-FNA. The
antinociceptive actions of the
[(2R,3S)-TMT1]DELT I analog
was suppressed by both
[D-Ala2,Leu5,
Cys6]enkephalin and
-FNA. These results are in contrast
to those found with the parent molecules DPDPE (primarily a
1 agonist) and DELT I (a mixed
1/
2 agonist). These results demonstrate that topographical modification in position 1 of the DPDPE and DELT I
peptides affects antinociceptive potency and opioid receptor selectivity.