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Species-specific pharmacology of maximakinin, an amphibian homologue of bradykinin: putative prodrug activity at the human B(2) receptor and peptidase resistance in rats

Maximakinin (MK), an amphibian peptide possessing the C-terminal sequence of bradykinin (BK), is a BK B(2) receptor (B(2)R) agonist eliciting prolonged signaling. We reinvestigated this 19-mer for species-specific pharmacologic profile, in vivo confirmation of resistance to inactivation by angiotens...

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Autores principales: Charest-Morin, Xavier, Bachelard, Hélène, Jean, Melissa, Marceau, Francois
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5248581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28133580
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2911
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author Charest-Morin, Xavier
Bachelard, Hélène
Jean, Melissa
Marceau, Francois
author_facet Charest-Morin, Xavier
Bachelard, Hélène
Jean, Melissa
Marceau, Francois
author_sort Charest-Morin, Xavier
collection PubMed
description Maximakinin (MK), an amphibian peptide possessing the C-terminal sequence of bradykinin (BK), is a BK B(2) receptor (B(2)R) agonist eliciting prolonged signaling. We reinvestigated this 19-mer for species-specific pharmacologic profile, in vivo confirmation of resistance to inactivation by angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE), value as a module for the design of fusion proteins that bind to the B(2)R in mammalian species and potential activity as a histamine releaser. Competition of the binding of [(3)H]BK to recombinant human myc-B(2)Rs in cells that express these receptors revealed that MK possessed a tenuous fraction (<0.1%) of the affinity of BK, despite being only ∼20-fold less potent than BK in a contractility assay based on the human isolated umbilical vein. These findings are reconciled by the generation of C-terminal fragments, like Lys-Gly-Pro-BK and Gly-Pro-BK, when the latent MK is incubated with human venous tissue (LC-MS), supporting activation via hydrolysis upstream of the BK sequence. At the rat recombinant myc-B(2)R, MK had a lesser affinity than that of BK, but with a narrower margin (6.2-fold, radioligand binding competition). Accordingly, MK (10 nM) stimulated calcium transients in cells that expressed the rat receptors, but not the human B(2)R. Recombinant MRGPRX2, a receptor that mediates cationic peptide-induced mast cell secretion, minimally responded by increased [Ca(+2)](i) to MK at 10 µM. Enhanced green fluorescent protein fused to MK (EGFP-MK) labeled cells that expressed rat, but not human B(2)Rs. Intravenous MK induced dose-dependent hypotensive, vasodilator and tachycardic responses in anesthetized rats and the effects were antagonized by pretreatment with icatibant but not modified by pyrilamine or enalaprilat. Strong species-specific responses to the toxin-derived peptide MK and its prodrug status in the isolated human vein were evidenced. Accordingly, MK in the EGFP-MK fusion protein is a pharmacophore module that confers affinity for the rat B(2)R, but not for the human form of the B(2)R. MK is unlikely to be an efficient mast cell activator, but its resistance to inactivation by ACE was confirmed in vivo.
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spelling pubmed-52485812017-01-27 Species-specific pharmacology of maximakinin, an amphibian homologue of bradykinin: putative prodrug activity at the human B(2) receptor and peptidase resistance in rats Charest-Morin, Xavier Bachelard, Hélène Jean, Melissa Marceau, Francois PeerJ Cardiology Maximakinin (MK), an amphibian peptide possessing the C-terminal sequence of bradykinin (BK), is a BK B(2) receptor (B(2)R) agonist eliciting prolonged signaling. We reinvestigated this 19-mer for species-specific pharmacologic profile, in vivo confirmation of resistance to inactivation by angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE), value as a module for the design of fusion proteins that bind to the B(2)R in mammalian species and potential activity as a histamine releaser. Competition of the binding of [(3)H]BK to recombinant human myc-B(2)Rs in cells that express these receptors revealed that MK possessed a tenuous fraction (<0.1%) of the affinity of BK, despite being only ∼20-fold less potent than BK in a contractility assay based on the human isolated umbilical vein. These findings are reconciled by the generation of C-terminal fragments, like Lys-Gly-Pro-BK and Gly-Pro-BK, when the latent MK is incubated with human venous tissue (LC-MS), supporting activation via hydrolysis upstream of the BK sequence. At the rat recombinant myc-B(2)R, MK had a lesser affinity than that of BK, but with a narrower margin (6.2-fold, radioligand binding competition). Accordingly, MK (10 nM) stimulated calcium transients in cells that expressed the rat receptors, but not the human B(2)R. Recombinant MRGPRX2, a receptor that mediates cationic peptide-induced mast cell secretion, minimally responded by increased [Ca(+2)](i) to MK at 10 µM. Enhanced green fluorescent protein fused to MK (EGFP-MK) labeled cells that expressed rat, but not human B(2)Rs. Intravenous MK induced dose-dependent hypotensive, vasodilator and tachycardic responses in anesthetized rats and the effects were antagonized by pretreatment with icatibant but not modified by pyrilamine or enalaprilat. Strong species-specific responses to the toxin-derived peptide MK and its prodrug status in the isolated human vein were evidenced. Accordingly, MK in the EGFP-MK fusion protein is a pharmacophore module that confers affinity for the rat B(2)R, but not for the human form of the B(2)R. MK is unlikely to be an efficient mast cell activator, but its resistance to inactivation by ACE was confirmed in vivo. PeerJ Inc. 2017-01-18 /pmc/articles/PMC5248581/ /pubmed/28133580 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2911 Text en ©2017 Charest-Morin et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Cardiology
Charest-Morin, Xavier
Bachelard, Hélène
Jean, Melissa
Marceau, Francois
Species-specific pharmacology of maximakinin, an amphibian homologue of bradykinin: putative prodrug activity at the human B(2) receptor and peptidase resistance in rats
title Species-specific pharmacology of maximakinin, an amphibian homologue of bradykinin: putative prodrug activity at the human B(2) receptor and peptidase resistance in rats
title_full Species-specific pharmacology of maximakinin, an amphibian homologue of bradykinin: putative prodrug activity at the human B(2) receptor and peptidase resistance in rats
title_fullStr Species-specific pharmacology of maximakinin, an amphibian homologue of bradykinin: putative prodrug activity at the human B(2) receptor and peptidase resistance in rats
title_full_unstemmed Species-specific pharmacology of maximakinin, an amphibian homologue of bradykinin: putative prodrug activity at the human B(2) receptor and peptidase resistance in rats
title_short Species-specific pharmacology of maximakinin, an amphibian homologue of bradykinin: putative prodrug activity at the human B(2) receptor and peptidase resistance in rats
title_sort species-specific pharmacology of maximakinin, an amphibian homologue of bradykinin: putative prodrug activity at the human b(2) receptor and peptidase resistance in rats
topic Cardiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5248581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28133580
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2911
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