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Dicarba analogues of alpha-conotoxin RgIA. structure, stability, and activity at potential pain targets

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 17:08 authored by Sandeep Chhabra, Alessia Belgi, Peter Bartels, Bianca van Lierop, Samuel Robinson, Shiva Nag Kompella, Andrew HungAndrew Hung, Brid Callaghan, David J AdamsDavid J Adams, Andrea Robinson, Raymond Norton
alpha-Conotoxin RgIA is both an antagonist of the alpha 9 alpha 10 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) subtype and an inhibitor of high-voltage-activated N-type calcium channel currents. RgIA has therapeutic potential for the treatment of pain, but reduction of the disulfide bond framework under physiological conditions represents a potential liability for clinical applications. We synthesized four RgIA analogues that replaced native disulfide pairs with nonreducible dicarba bridges. Solution structures were determined by NMR, activity assessed against biological targets, and stability evaluated in human serum. [3,12]-Dicarba analogues retained inhibition of ACh-evoked currents at alpha 9 alpha 10 nAChRs but not N-type calcium channel currents, whereas [2,8]-dicarba analogues displayed the opposite pattern of selectivity. The [2,8]-dicarba RgIA analogues were effective in HEK293 cells stably expressing human Cav2.2 channels and transfected with human GABAB receptors. The analogues also exhibited improved serum stability over the native peptide. These selectively acting dicarba analogues may represent mechanistic probes to explore analgesia-related biological receptors.

History

Journal

Journal of Medicinal Chemistry

Volume

57

Issue

23

Start page

9933

End page

9944

Total pages

12

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 American Chemical Society

Former Identifier

2006051255

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-04-20

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