論文

査読有り 国際誌
2018年9月

Blockade of analgesic effects following systemic administration of N-methyl-kyotorphin, NMYR and arginine in mice deficient of preproenkephalin or proopiomelanocortin gene.

Peptides
  • Hiroyuki Neyama
  • ,
  • Yusuke Hamada
  • ,
  • Ryoko Tsukahara
  • ,
  • Minoru Narita
  • ,
  • Kazuhiro Tsukamoto
  • ,
  • Hiroshi Ueda

107
開始ページ
10
終了ページ
16
記述言語
英語
掲載種別
DOI
10.1016/j.peptides.2018.06.010

Kyotorphin is a unique biologically active neuropeptide (l-tyrosine-l-arginine), which is reported to have opioid-like analgesic actions through a release of Met-enkephalin from the brain slices. N-methyl-l-tyrosine-l-arginine (NMYR), an enzymatically stable mimetic of kyotorphin, successfully caused potent analgesic effects in thermal and mechanical nociception tests in mice when it was given through systemic routes. NMYR analgesia was abolished in μ-opioid receptor-deficient (MOP-KO) mice, and by intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injection of naloxone and of N-methyl l-leucine-l-arginine (NMLR), a kyotorphin receptor antagonist. In the Ca2+-mobilization assay using CHO cells expressing Gαqi5 and hMOPr or hDOPr, however, the addition of kyotorphin neither activated MOPr-mechanisms, nor affected the concentration-dependent activation of DAMGO- or Met-Enkephalin-induced MOPr activation, and Met-enkephalin-induced DOPr activation. NMYR-analgesia was significantly attenuated in preproenkephalin (PENK)- or proopioimelanocortin (POMC)-KO mice. The systemic administration of arginine, which is reported to elevate the level of endogenous kyotorphin selectively in midbrain and medulla oblongata, pain-related brain regions, caused significant analgesia, and the analgesia was reversed by i.c.v. injection of NMLR or naloxone. In addition, PENK- and POMC-KO mice also attenuated the arginine-induced analgesia. All these findings suggest that NMYR and arginine activate brain kyotorphin receptor in direct and indirect manner, respectively and both compounds indirectly cause the opioid-like analgesia through the action of endogenous opioid peptides.

リンク情報
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.peptides.2018.06.010
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30040980
ID情報
  • DOI : 10.1016/j.peptides.2018.06.010
  • ISSN : 0196-9781
  • PubMed ID : 30040980

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