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Neurotrophic Activity and Its Modulation by Zinc Ion of a Dimeric Peptide Mimicking the Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor N-Terminal Region

Authors :
Lara Russo
Chiara Giacomelli
Mariagrazia Fortino
Tiziano Marzo
Gianmarco Ferri
Mariantonietta Calvello
Alessandro Viegi
Antonio Magrì
Alessandro Pratesi
Adriana Pietropaolo
Francesco Cardarelli
Claudia Martini
Enrico Rizzarelli
Laura Marchetti
Diego La Mendola
Maria Letizia Trincavelli
Russo, Lara
Giacomelli, Chiara
Fortino, Mariagrazia
Marzo, Tiziano
Ferri, Gianmarco
Calvello, Mariantonietta
Viegi, Alessandro
Magrì, Antonio
Pratesi, Alessandro
Pietropaolo, Adriana
Cardarelli, Francesco
Martini, Claudia
Rizzarelli, Enrico
Marchetti, Laura
La Mendola, Diego
Trincavelli, Maria Letizia
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is a neurotrophin (NT) essential for neuronal development and synaptic plasticity. Dysregulation of BDNF signaling is implicated in different neurological disorders. The direct NT administration as therapeutics has revealed to be challenging. This has prompted the design of peptides mimicking different regions of the BDNF structure. Although loops 2 and 4 have been thoroughly investigated, less is known regarding the BDNF N-terminal region, which is involved in the selective recognition of the TrkB receptor. Herein, a dimeric form of the linear peptide encompassing the 1-12 residues of the BDNF N-terminal (d-bdnf) was synthesized. It demonstrated to act as an agonist promoting specific phosphorylation of TrkB and downstream ERK and AKT effectors. The ability to promote TrkB dimerization was investigated by advanced fluorescence microscopy and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, finding activation modes shared with BDNF. Furthermore, d-bdnf was able to sustain neurite outgrowth and increase the expression of differentiation (NEFM, LAMC1) and polarization markers (MAP2, MAPT) demonstrating its neurotrophic activity. As TrkB activity is affected by zinc ions in the synaptic cleft, we first verified the ability of d-bdnf to coordinate zinc and then the effect of such complexation on its activity. The d-bdnf neurotrophic activity was reduced by zinc complexation, demonstrating the role of the latter in tuning the activity of the new peptido-mimetic. Taken together our data uncover the neurotrophic properties of a novel BDNF mimetic peptide and pave the way for future studies to understand the pharmacological basis of d-bdnf action and develop novel BDNF-based therapeutic strategies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6ec7524565244c503983178e1505c6da