The utility of oligopeptidase in brain-targeting delivery of an enkephalin analogue by prodrug design

Open Med Chem J. 2008 Oct 20:2:97-100. doi: 10.2174/1874104500802010097.

Abstract

In a brain-targeting prodrug approach for a metabolically stable enkephalin analogue DADLE, specific enzymes are utilized for in vivo prodrug activation. Prolyl oligopeptidase (POP) may be especially useful in this regard. In vitro metabolic stability of the putative metabolites of prodrugs having various "spacers" has shown that POP provides significantly faster release of DADLE from conjugates having dipeptidyl spacer (specifically Xaa-Pro or Xaa-Ala) than alternative peptidases utilized when single amino acids are used as spacers. In vitro half-lives measured in rat brain homogenate showed excellent correlation with CNS-mediated analgesia using the tail-flick model in rats providing, thus, an in vivo substantiation of the prodrug approach relying on POP as the peptidase to release DADLE.

Keywords: DADLE; Enkephalin; antinociception.; brain-targeting prodrug; prolyl oligopeptidase (POP).