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Publication : Enhanced antinociceptive response to intracerebroventricular kyotorphin in Pept2 null mice.

First Author  Jiang H Year  2009
Journal  J Neurochem Volume  109
Issue  5 Pages  1536-43
PubMed ID  19383084 Mgi Jnum  J:149485
Mgi Id  MGI:3848591 Doi  10.1111/j.1471-4159.2009.06090.x
Citation  Jiang H, et al. (2009) Enhanced antinociceptive response to intracerebroventricular kyotorphin in Pept2 null mice. J Neurochem 109(5):1536-43
abstractText  L-Kyotorphin (L-KTP), an endogenous analgesic neuropeptide, is a substrate for aminopeptidases and a proton-coupled oligopeptide transporter, PEPT2. This study examined the CSF efflux, antinociceptive response, and hydrolysis kinetics in brain of L-KTP and its synthetic diastereomer D-kyotorphin (D-KTP) in wild-type and Pept2 null mice. CSF clearance of L-KTP was slower in Pept2 null mice than in wild-type animals, and this difference was reflected in greater L-KTP-induced analgesia in Pept2 null mice. Moreover, dose-response analyses showed that the ED50 of L-KTP in Pept2-deficient animals was one-fifth of the value observed in Pept2-competent animals (4 vs. 21 nmol for null vs. wild-type mice, respectively). In contrast, the ED50 of D-KTP was very similar between the two genotypes (9-10 nmol). Likewise, there was little difference between genotypes in slope factor or baseline effects of L-KTP and D-KTP. The enhanced antinociceptive response to L-KTP in Pept2 null mice could not be explained by differences in neuropeptide degradation as Vmax and Km values did not differ between genotypes. Our results demonstrate that PEPT2 can significantly impact the analgesic response to an endogenous neuropeptide by altering CSF (and presumably brain interstitial fluid) concentrations and that it may influence the disposition and response to exogenous peptide/mimetic substrates.
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