Dermorphin analogs carrying an increased positive net charge in their "message" domain display extremely high .mu.-opioid receptor selectivity
According to the membrane compartment concept the receptor specificity of ligands is based not only on ligand-receptor complementarity but also on specific ligand-membrane interactions. Elaboration of this concept for opioid peptide-receptor interactions had led to the assumption that mu- and delta-...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of medicinal chemistry 1989-03, Vol.32 (3), p.698-703 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | According to the membrane compartment concept the receptor specificity of ligands is based not only on ligand-receptor complementarity but also on specific ligand-membrane interactions. Elaboration of this concept for opioid peptide-receptor interactions had led to the assumption that mu- and delta-receptors are located in anionic and cationic membrane compartments, respectively, and to the prediction that positively charged opioid receptor ligands should display mu-receptor selectivity. To assess the validity of this model, we synthesized a series of dermorphin analogues carrying a net positive charge and tested them in mu- and delta-receptor representative binding assays and bioassays. Some but not all of the prepared compounds showed the receptor-selectivity profile expected on the basis of the membrane compartment concept. In particular, gradual augmentation of the positive charge from 1+ to 3+ in a series of dermorphin-(1-4) tetrapeptide analogues produced an enhancement of mu-receptor affinity and a progressive decrease in delta-receptor affinity, resulting in increasingly higher mu-receptor selectivity. The most selective compound was [D-Arg2,Lys4]dermorphin-(1-4)-amide (DALDA), showing a selectivity ratio (Ki delta/Ki mu = 11,400) more than 10 times higher than that of DAGO (Ki delta /Ki mu = 1050) and, thus, displaying unprecedented mu-receptor specificity. Because of its high positive charge (3+), DALDA may be particularly useful as a very specific agonist for studying peripheral mu-receptor interactions. |
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ISSN: | 0022-2623 1520-4804 |
DOI: | 10.1021/jm00123a035 |