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J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. · Jun 2012
An inhibitor of neuronal exocytosis (DD04107) displays long-lasting in vivo activity against chronic inflammatory and neuropathic pain.
- Berta Ponsati, Cristina Carreño, Verdad Curto-Reyes, Belen Valenzuela, María José Duart, Wim Van den Nest, Omar Cauli, Beatriz Beltran, Jimena Fernandez, Franco Borsini, Antonio Caprioli, Stefano Di Serio, Mario Veretchy, Ana Baamonde, Luis Menendez, Francisco Barros, Pilar de la Pena, Ricardo Borges, Vicente Felipo, Rosa Planells-Cases, and Antonio Ferrer-Montiel.
- BCN Peptides, Sant Quintí de Mediona, Spain.
- J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 2012 Jun 1;341(3):634-45.
AbstractSmall peptides patterned after the N terminus of the synaptosomal protein of 25 kDa, a member of the protein complex implicated in Ca(2+)-dependent neuronal exocytosis, inhibit in vitro the release of neuromodulators involved in pain signaling, suggesting an in vivo analgesic activity. Here, we report that compound DD04107 (palmitoyl-EEMQRR-NH(2)), a 6-mer palmitoylated peptide that blocks the inflammatory recruitment of ion channels to the plasma membrane of nociceptors and the release of calcitonin gene-related peptide from primary sensory neurons, displays potent and long-lasting in vivo antihyperalgesia and antiallodynia in chronic models of inflammatory and neuropathic pain, such as the complete Freund's adjuvant, osteosarcoma, chemotherapy, and diabetic neuropathic models. Subcutaneous administration of the peptide produced a dose-dependent antihyperalgesic and antiallodynic activity that lasted ≥24 h. The compound showed a systemic distribution, characterized by a bicompartmental pharmacokinetic profile. Safety pharmacology studies indicated that the peptide is largely devoid of side effects and substantiated that the in vivo activity is not caused by locomotor impairment. Therefore, DD04107 is a potent and long-lasting antinociceptive compound that displays a safe pharmacological profile. These findings support the notion that neuronal exocytosis of receptors and neuronal algogens pivotally contribute to chronic inflammatory and neuropathic pain and imply a central role of peptidergic nociceptor sensitization to the pathogenesis of pain.
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