| Literature DB >> 25313329 |
Timothy A Hill1, Rink-Jan Lohman1, Huy N Hoang1, Daniel S Nielsen1, Conor C G Scully1, W Mei Kok1, Ligong Liu1, Andrew J Lucke1, Martin J Stoermer1, Christina I Schroeder1, Stephanie Chaousis1, Barbara Colless1, Paul V Bernhardt2, David J Edmonds3, David A Griffith3, Charles J Rotter4, Roger B Ruggeri3, David A Price3, Spiros Liras3, David J Craik1, David P Fairlie1.
Abstract
Development of peptide-based drugs has been severely limited by lack of oral bioavailability with less than a handful of peptides being truly orally bioavailable, mainly cyclic peptides with N-methyl amino acids and few hydrogen bond donors. Here we report that cyclic penta- and hexa-leucine peptides, with no N-methylation and five or six amide NH protons, exhibit some degree of oral bioavailability (4-17%) approaching that of the heavily N-methylated drug cyclosporine (22%) under the same conditions. These simple cyclic peptides demonstrate that oral bioavailability is achievable for peptides that fall outside of rule-of-five guidelines without the need for N-methylation or modified amino acids.Entities:
Keywords: Oral bioavailability; absorption; peptides; permeability; rule of five
Year: 2014 PMID: 25313329 PMCID: PMC4190638 DOI: 10.1021/ml5002823
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Med Chem Lett ISSN: 1948-5875 Impact factor: 4.345