Cyclizing Painkillers: Development of Backbone-Cyclic TAPS Analogs

Painkillers are commonly used medications. Native peptide painkillers suffer from various pharmacological disadvantages, while small molecule painkillers like morphine are highly addictive. We present a general approach aimed to use backbone-cyclization to develop a peptidomimetic painkiller. Backbo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in chemistry 2020-11, Vol.8, p.532577-532577
Hauptverfasser: Talhami, Alaa, Swed, Avi, Hess, Shmuel, Ovadia, Oded, Greenberg, Sarit, Schumacher-Klinger, Adi, Rosenthal, David, Shalev, Deborah E., Hurevich, Mattan, Lazarovici, Philip, Hoffman, Amnon, Gilon, Chaim
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Painkillers are commonly used medications. Native peptide painkillers suffer from various pharmacological disadvantages, while small molecule painkillers like morphine are highly addictive. We present a general approach aimed to use backbone-cyclization to develop a peptidomimetic painkiller. Backbone-cyclization was applied to transform the linear peptide Tyr-Arg-Phe-Sar (TAPS) into an active backbone-cyclic peptide with improved drug properties. We designed and synthesized a focused backbone-cyclic TAPS library with conformational diversity, in which the members of the library have the generic name TAPS c(n-m) where n and m represent the lengths of the alkyl chains on the nitrogens of Gly and Arg, respectively. We used a combined screening approach to evaluate the pharmacological properties and the potency of the TAPS c(n-m) library. We focused on an in vivo active compound, TAPS c(2-6) , which is metabolically stable and has the potential to become a peripheral painkiller being a full μ opioid receptor functional agonist. To prepare a large quantity of TAPS c(2-6) , we optimized the conditions of the on-resin reductive alkylation step to increase the efficiency of its SPPS. NMR was used to determine the solution conformation of the peptide lead TAPS c(2-6) .
ISSN:2296-2646
2296-2646
DOI:10.3389/fchem.2020.532577