| Literature DB >> 24476666 |
Aline Dantas de Araujo1, Mehdi Mobli2, Joel Castro3, Andrea M Harrington3, Irina Vetter1, Zoltan Dekan1, Markus Muttenthaler4, JingJing Wan1, Richard J Lewis1, Glenn F King1, Stuart M Brierley5, Paul F Alewood1.
Abstract
Poor oral availability and susceptibility to reduction and protease degradation is a major hurdle in peptide drug development. However, drugable receptors in the gut present an attractive niche for peptide therapeutics. Here we demonstrate, in a mouse model of chronic abdominal pain, that oxytocin receptors are significantly upregulated in nociceptors innervating the colon. Correspondingly, we develop chemical strategies to engineer non-reducible and therefore more stable oxytocin analogues. Chemoselective selenide macrocyclization yields stabilized analogues equipotent to native oxytocin. Ultra-high-field nuclear magnetic resonance structural analysis of native oxytocin and the seleno-oxytocin derivatives reveals that oxytocin has a pre-organized structure in solution, in marked contrast to earlier X-ray crystallography studies. Finally, we show that these seleno-oxytocin analogues potently inhibit colonic nociceptors both in vitro and in vivo in mice with chronic visceral hypersensitivity. Our findings have potentially important implications for clinical use of oxytocin analogues and disulphide-rich peptides in general.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24476666 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms4165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919