Abstract

RB 101 ( N-(( R, S)-2-benzyl-3[( S)(2-amino-4-methylthio)butyldithio]-1-oxopropyl)- l-phenylalanine benzyl ester) is a full inhibitor of the enkephalin-catabolizing enzymes, which induces strong naloxone-reversible antinociceptive responses after i.v. or i.p. administration, but is only slightly active after oral administration. Chemical modifications were introduced on this compound, resulting in molecules such as RB 120 ( N-(( S)-2-benzyl-3[( S)(2-amino-4-methylthio)butyldithio]-1-oxopropyl)- l-alanine benzyl ester), which was selected for a complete study, after oral administration, in various assays commonly used to select analgesics: mouse hot plate test, rat tail-flick test, electrical stimulation of the tail in rats, paw pressure test on inflamed paws in rats, acetic acid-induced writhing test and the formalin test in mice. RB 120 induced potent dose-dependent antinociceptive responses in all these tests after oral administration. The differences in antinociceptive effects induced by RB 120 in the various assays is probably related to the amount of enkephalins released and to the efficiency of peptidase inactivation in particular brain regions implicated in the control of a given nociceptive input. The goal of discovering orally active analgesics endowed with a potency similar to that of morphine but devoid of its major side-effects, seems now to have been reached with mixed neutral endopeptidase/aminopeptidase N (NEP/APN) inhibitors, although these compounds have yet to be evaluated in clinical trials.

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