Abstract

Oxytocin (OT) is a peptide hormone agonist of the oxytocin receptor (OTR) that has been proposed as a therapeutic to treat a number of social and emotional disorders in addition to its current clinical use to induce labor and treat postpartum bleeding. OT is administered intravenously and intranasally rather than orally, in part because its low passive permeability causes low oral bioavailability. Non-peptidic OTR agonists have also been reported, but none with the exquisite potency of the peptide based agonists. In this report, we describe the OTR agonist activity and exposed polarity of a set of truncated OT analogs as well as hybrid peptide-small molecule analogs of OT. Examples of both truncated analogs and peptide-small molecule hybrid analogs are potent and selective OTR agonists. Hybrid agonist 13, which is 232 Da smaller than OT, still retains subnanomolar potency, full agonist activity, and selectivity over V1a. While these compounds were designed to address the low permeability of OT and other full length analogs, we found that reduction in molecular weight and the removal or replacement of the three amino acid tail of OT did not have a significant effect on passive permeability.

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