Abstract

1. In the search for kappa-opioid antagonists, we have designed two N,N-diallyl substituted analogues of the kappa-selective peptide [D-Pro10]dynorphin A (1-11)(DPDYN). In this study, we have examined (i) the binding properties of N,N-diallyl-DPDYN (analogue 1) and N,N-diallyl-[Aib2,3]DPDYN (analogue 2) at the three main types (mu, delta, kappa) of opioid binding sites, (ii) their binding sensitivity to Na+ ions (120 mM NaCl) and guanine nucleotide (50 microM Gpp(NH)p) at mu- and kappa-binding sites and (iii) their biological activity in two pharmacological bioassays specific for mu- and kappa-(guinea-pig ileum) and kappa-(rabbit vas deferens) opioid receptors. 2. Steric hindrance resulting from incorporation of two bulky allyl groups at the tyrosal nitrogen atom greatly altered the binding properties of DPDYN. A dramatic fall in apparent affinity for the three types (mu, delta, kappa) of site as well as selectivity for kappa-sites was observed for the two N,N-diallyl-substituted peptide analogues. 3. At kappa-sites of guinea-pig cerebellum and mu-sites of rabbit cerebellum, N,N-diallyl-substitution led to a complete loss of binding sensitivity to the inhibitory effect of 120 mM NaCl + 50 microM Gpp(NH)p compared to the high sensitivity of DPDYN. This may therefore suggest that the N,N-diallyl-DPDYN analogues are endowed with opioid antagonist properties. 4. No agonist activity of the analogues was observed in guinea-pig myenteric plexus and rabbit vas deferens organ preparations. In contrast, both of the diallyl-substituted peptides displayed similar antagonist properties against the kappa-agonist DPDYN in both preparations. In the guinea-pig ileum, the affinities of the antagonist peptides against the mu-agonist Tyr-D-Ala-Gly-MePhe- NH(CH2)20H(DAGOL) were approximately half that observed against DPDYN. 5. These results show that N,N-diallyl-tyrosyl substitution leads to analogues of DPDYN which act in vitro as pure opioid antagonists and exhibit a reasonable affinity at, but a weak selectivity for, the K-opioid receptors.

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