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Insightful Backbone Modifications Preventing Proteolytic Degradation of Neurotensin Analogs Improve NTS1-Induced Protective Hypothermia

Therapeutic hypothermia represents a brain-protective strategy for multiple emergency situations, such as stroke or traumatic injury. Neurotensin (NT), which exerts its effects through activation of two G protein-coupled receptors, namely NTS1 and NTS2, induces a strong and long-lasting decrease in...

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Autores principales: Previti, Santo, Vivancos, Mélanie, Rémond, Emmanuelle, Beaulieu, Sabrina, Longpré, Jean-Michel, Ballet, Steven, Sarret, Philippe, Cavelier, Florine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7291367/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32582624
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2020.00406
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author Previti, Santo
Vivancos, Mélanie
Rémond, Emmanuelle
Beaulieu, Sabrina
Longpré, Jean-Michel
Ballet, Steven
Sarret, Philippe
Cavelier, Florine
author_facet Previti, Santo
Vivancos, Mélanie
Rémond, Emmanuelle
Beaulieu, Sabrina
Longpré, Jean-Michel
Ballet, Steven
Sarret, Philippe
Cavelier, Florine
author_sort Previti, Santo
collection PubMed
description Therapeutic hypothermia represents a brain-protective strategy for multiple emergency situations, such as stroke or traumatic injury. Neurotensin (NT), which exerts its effects through activation of two G protein-coupled receptors, namely NTS1 and NTS2, induces a strong and long-lasting decrease in core body temperature after its central administration. Growing evidence demonstrates that NTS1 is the receptor subtype mediating the hypothermic action of NT. As such, potent NTS1 agonists designed on the basis of the minimal C-terminal NT(8-13) bioactive fragment have been shown to produce mild hypothermia and exert neuroprotective effects under various clinically relevant conditions. The high susceptibility of NT(8-13) to protease degradation (half-life <2 min) represents, however, a serious limitation for its use in pharmacological therapy. In light of this, we report here a structure-activity relationship study in which pairs of NT(8-13) analogs have been developed, based on the incorporation of a reduced Lys(8)-Lys(9) bond. To further stabilize the peptide bonds, a panel of backbone modifications was also inserted along the peptide sequence, including Sip(10), D-Trp(11), Dmt(11), Tle(12), and TMSAla(13). Our results revealed that the combination of appropriate chemical modifications leads to compounds exhibiting improved resistance to proteolytic cleavages (>24 h; 16). Among them, the NT(8-13) analogs harboring the reduced amine bond combined with the unnatural amino acids TMSAla(13) (4) and Sip(10) (6) or the di-substitution Lys(11) - TMSAla(13) (12), D-Trp(11)-TMSAla(13) (14), and Dmt(11)-Tle(12) (16) produced sustained hypothermic effects (−3°C for at least 1 h). Importantly, we observed that hypothermia was mainly driven by the increased stability of the NT(8-13) derivatives, instead of the high binding-affinity at NTS1. Altogether, these results reveal the importance of the reduced amine bond in optimizing the metabolic properties of the NT(8-13) peptide and support the development of stable NTS1 agonists as first drug candidate in neuroprotective hypothermia.
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spelling pubmed-72913672020-06-23 Insightful Backbone Modifications Preventing Proteolytic Degradation of Neurotensin Analogs Improve NTS1-Induced Protective Hypothermia Previti, Santo Vivancos, Mélanie Rémond, Emmanuelle Beaulieu, Sabrina Longpré, Jean-Michel Ballet, Steven Sarret, Philippe Cavelier, Florine Front Chem Chemistry Therapeutic hypothermia represents a brain-protective strategy for multiple emergency situations, such as stroke or traumatic injury. Neurotensin (NT), which exerts its effects through activation of two G protein-coupled receptors, namely NTS1 and NTS2, induces a strong and long-lasting decrease in core body temperature after its central administration. Growing evidence demonstrates that NTS1 is the receptor subtype mediating the hypothermic action of NT. As such, potent NTS1 agonists designed on the basis of the minimal C-terminal NT(8-13) bioactive fragment have been shown to produce mild hypothermia and exert neuroprotective effects under various clinically relevant conditions. The high susceptibility of NT(8-13) to protease degradation (half-life <2 min) represents, however, a serious limitation for its use in pharmacological therapy. In light of this, we report here a structure-activity relationship study in which pairs of NT(8-13) analogs have been developed, based on the incorporation of a reduced Lys(8)-Lys(9) bond. To further stabilize the peptide bonds, a panel of backbone modifications was also inserted along the peptide sequence, including Sip(10), D-Trp(11), Dmt(11), Tle(12), and TMSAla(13). Our results revealed that the combination of appropriate chemical modifications leads to compounds exhibiting improved resistance to proteolytic cleavages (>24 h; 16). Among them, the NT(8-13) analogs harboring the reduced amine bond combined with the unnatural amino acids TMSAla(13) (4) and Sip(10) (6) or the di-substitution Lys(11) - TMSAla(13) (12), D-Trp(11)-TMSAla(13) (14), and Dmt(11)-Tle(12) (16) produced sustained hypothermic effects (−3°C for at least 1 h). Importantly, we observed that hypothermia was mainly driven by the increased stability of the NT(8-13) derivatives, instead of the high binding-affinity at NTS1. Altogether, these results reveal the importance of the reduced amine bond in optimizing the metabolic properties of the NT(8-13) peptide and support the development of stable NTS1 agonists as first drug candidate in neuroprotective hypothermia. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-06-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7291367/ /pubmed/32582624 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2020.00406 Text en Copyright © 2020 Previti, Vivancos, Rémond, Beaulieu, Longpré, Ballet, Sarret and Cavelier. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Chemistry
Previti, Santo
Vivancos, Mélanie
Rémond, Emmanuelle
Beaulieu, Sabrina
Longpré, Jean-Michel
Ballet, Steven
Sarret, Philippe
Cavelier, Florine
Insightful Backbone Modifications Preventing Proteolytic Degradation of Neurotensin Analogs Improve NTS1-Induced Protective Hypothermia
title Insightful Backbone Modifications Preventing Proteolytic Degradation of Neurotensin Analogs Improve NTS1-Induced Protective Hypothermia
title_full Insightful Backbone Modifications Preventing Proteolytic Degradation of Neurotensin Analogs Improve NTS1-Induced Protective Hypothermia
title_fullStr Insightful Backbone Modifications Preventing Proteolytic Degradation of Neurotensin Analogs Improve NTS1-Induced Protective Hypothermia
title_full_unstemmed Insightful Backbone Modifications Preventing Proteolytic Degradation of Neurotensin Analogs Improve NTS1-Induced Protective Hypothermia
title_short Insightful Backbone Modifications Preventing Proteolytic Degradation of Neurotensin Analogs Improve NTS1-Induced Protective Hypothermia
title_sort insightful backbone modifications preventing proteolytic degradation of neurotensin analogs improve nts1-induced protective hypothermia
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7291367/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32582624
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2020.00406
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