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Synthesis, biological evaluation and structural characterization of novel glycopeptide analogues of nociceptin N/OFQ.

Authors :
Arsequell G
Rosa M
Mayato C
Dorta RL
Gonzalez-Nunez V
Barreto-Valer K
Marcelo F
Calle LP
Vázquez JT
Rodríguez RE
Jiménez-Barbero J
Valencia G
Source :
Organic & biomolecular chemistry [Org Biomol Chem] 2011 Sep 07; Vol. 9 (17), pp. 6133-42. Date of Electronic Publication: 2011 Jul 19.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

To examine if the biological activity of the N/OFQ peptide, which is the native ligand of the pain-related and viable drug target NOP receptor, could be modulated by glycosylation and if such effects could be conformationally related, we have synthesized three N/OFQ glycopeptide analogues, namely: [Thr(5)-O-α-D-GalNAc-N/OFQ] (glycopeptide 1), [Ser(10)-O-α-D-GalNAc]-N/OFQ (glycopeptide 2) and [Ser(10)-O-β-D-GlcNAc]-N/OFQ] (glycopeptide 3). They were tested for biological activity in competition binding assays using the zebrafish animal model in which glycopeptide 2 exhibited a slightly improved binding affinity, whereas glycopeptide 1 showed a remarkably reduced binding affinity compared to the parent compound and glycopeptide 3. The structural analysis of these glycopeptides and the parent N/OFQ peptide by NMR and circular dichroism indicated that their aqueous solutions are mainly populated by random coil conformers. However, in membrane mimic environments a certain proportion of the molecules of all these peptides exist as α-helix structures. Interestingly, under these experimental conditions, glycopeptide 1 (glycosylated at Thr-5) exhibited a population of folded hairpin-like geometries. From these facts it is tempting to speculate that nociceptin analogues showing linear helical structures are more complementary and thus interact more efficiently with the native NOP receptor than folded structures, since glycopeptide 1 showed a significantly reduced binding affinity for the NOP receptor.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1477-0539
Volume :
9
Issue :
17
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Organic & biomolecular chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
21773621
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/c1ob05197k