Publication Date:
2002
abstract:
Peptides embedded in the sequence of pre-pro-nociceptin, i.e. nociceptin,
nocistatin and orphanin FQ2, have shed light on the complexity of the
mechanisms involving the peptide hormones related to pain and have opened
up new perspectives for the clinical treatment of pain. The design of new
ligands with high selectivity and bioavailability, in particular for ORL1,
is important both for the elucidation and control of the physiological
role
of the receptor and for their therapeutic importance. The failure to
obtain
agonists and antagonists when using, for nociceptin, the same
substitutions
that are successful for opioids, and the conformational flexibility of
them
all, justify systematic efforts to study the solution conformation under
conditions as close as possible to their natural environment. Structural
studies of linear peptides in solution are hampered by their high
flexibility. A direct structural study of the complex between a peptide
and
its receptor would overcome this difficulty, but such a study is not easy
since opioid receptors are membrane proteins. Thus, conformational studies
of lead peptides in solution are still important for drug design. This
review deals with conformational studies of natural pre-nociceptin
peptides
in several solvents that mimic in part the different environments in which
the peptides exert their action. None of the structural investigations
yielded a completely reliable bioactive conformation, but the global
conformation of the peptides in biomimetic environments can shed light on
their interaction with receptors.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
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