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Small cyclic sodium channel inhibitors.

Authors :
Peigneur S
da Costa Oliveira C
de Sousa Fonseca FC
McMahon KL
Mueller A
Cheneval O
Cristina Nogueira Freitas A
Starobova H
Dimitri Gama Duarte I
Craik DJ
Vetter I
de Lima ME
Schroeder CI
Tytgat J
Source :
Biochemical pharmacology [Biochem Pharmacol] 2021 Jan; Vol. 183, pp. 114291. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Oct 17.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Voltage-gated sodium (Na <subscript>V</subscript> ) channels play crucial roles in a range of (patho)physiological processes. Much interest has arisen within the pharmaceutical industry to pursue these channels as analgesic targets following overwhelming evidence that Na <subscript>V</subscript> channel subtypes Na <subscript>V</subscript> 1.7-Na <subscript>V</subscript> 1.9 are involved in nociception. More recently, Na <subscript>V</subscript> 1.1, Na <subscript>V</subscript> 1.3 and Na <subscript>V</subscript> 1.6 have also been identified to be involved in pain pathways. Venom-derived disulfide-rich peptide toxins, isolated from spiders and cone snails, have been used extensively as probes to investigate these channels and have attracted much interest as drug leads. However, few peptide-based leads have made it as drugs due to unfavourable physiochemical attributes including poor in vivo pharmacokinetics and limited oral bioavailability. The present work aims to bridge the gap in the development pipeline between drug leads and drug candidates by downsizing these larger venom-derived Na <subscript>V</subscript> inhibitors into smaller, more "drug-like" molecules. Here, we use molecular engineering of small cyclic peptides to aid in the determination of what drives subtype selectivity and molecular interactions of these downsized inhibitors across Na <subscript>V</subscript> subtypes. We designed a series of small, stable and novel Na <subscript>V</subscript> probes displaying Na <subscript>V</subscript> subtype selectivity and potency in vitro coupled with potent in vivo analgesic activity, involving yet to be elucidated analgesic pathways in addition to Na <subscript>V</subscript> subtype modulation.<br /> (Published by Elsevier Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1873-2968
Volume :
183
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Biochemical pharmacology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33075312
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2020.114291