Peptides Flashcards
Peptide
A compound consisting of two or amino acids linked in a chain, joined by covalent bonding of the amino region of one amino acid with the carboxyl region of another
Neuropeptides
Small peptide proteins (3-40AA) produced in and released from neurons
There are ~100 distinct neuropeptides, some of which arise from different processing of the same gene
Peptide families
Peptides are groups into families based on shared genetic code, which results in shared structures and release patterns
eg: calcitonin CGRP family
What are the three key concepts of this module?
- Mature peptides are derived from sequential processing events from a larger precursor peptide, creating substantial diversity from each gene
- neuropeptides are neuromodulators, not neurotransmitters
- Peptide-receptor systems can be targeted in many different ways for therapeutic benefit
Neuropeptide processing
- Pre-pro-peptide is inserted into the ER via signal sequence, which facilitates its own cleavage by signal peptidase
- Pro-peptides undergo endoproteolytic cleavage in vesicles, whereby junk sequences are removed by prohormone convertases. The cleavage sites are signalled by dibasic amino acid sequences (RR/RK/KK).
- Further processing of pro-peptides is accomplished via carboxypeptidases
- This may be aided by action of cathespin L or Arg/Lys aminopeptidase
- Post-translational modification may be required to achieve a C-terminal amide or a disulphide bond.. etc
Diversity from pro-peptides (3)
- Pro-peptides can contain multiple copies of a neuropeptide
- Pro-peptides can contain several different neuropeptides with different functions
- Pro-peptides undergo tissue specific processing, resulting in different mature neuropeptides produced in different tissues
how are neuropeptides packaged and released?
neuropeptides are packaged in large dense core vesicles, which are released in bolus
What characteristics of neuropeptides implicates their role as neuromodulators, rather than neuropeptides
Neuropeptides undergo volume transmission/dispersion whereby they can act at extra-synaptic receptors
- This is aided by a high receptor affinity, that allows action at diffuse concentrations
- Allows action both pre/post-synaptically
- No reuptake, instead slow degradation by proteases, which can create different bioactive peptides
Signalling occurs primarily through GPCRs, which are relatively slow acting comparative to ion channels
Example of a neuropeptide acting as a neuromodulator
NPY acts
- pre-synaptically on Y2R to reduce release of GABA and glutamate
- post-synaptically on Y1R to inhibit hypocretin/orexin cells
Four general ways of therapeutically targeting neuropeptides
- Biosynthetic pathway
- Release mechansm
- Peptide
- Receptor
List two ways of targeting a peptide post-release
- Monoclonal antibodies that bind released peptides, thus preventing them from activating receptors
- Inhibiting proteolytic degradation to increase intensity and duration of endogenous peptide release
List 4 ways of targeting neuropeptide receptors
- Small molecule agonist/antagonist
- Monoclonal antibody agonist/antagonist
- Synthetic/recombinant form of peptide to supplement endogenous activity
- Using a variant of the peptide that is protected from proteolytic breakdown by proteases, thus prolonging duration and intensity of effect
What is pain?
Pain is a protective subjective experience that facilitates response to injury. It can be described as acute or chronic. Overall there is an unmet clinical need for pain management.
List three types of pain
- Pain associated with tissue pathology (trauma, inflammation, tumour)
- Pain associated with nervous system pathology, aka neuropathic pain (diabetes)
- Musculo-skeletal pain
Type of nociceptive fibres
unmyelinated C fibres and myelinated A-delta fibres
Neural pathway for bodily pain
- nociceptive input to nerve ending
- signal travels up spinothalamic tract via the dorsal root ganglion
- travels via spinal cord to higher brain centres
Neural pathway for face/head pain
- nociceptive input to nerve ending
- signal travels to cell body in trigeminal ganglion
- travels via spinal nucleus of trigeminal nerve to higher brain centres
How can neuropeptides modulate pain?
Enhance nociceptive pathways
eg: capsaicin activates the TRPV1 receptor, causing release of CGRP on nerve fibres, which excites pain transmission neurons
Inhibit nociceptive pathways
eg: enkephalins inhibit pain transmission neurons
List 5 endogenous opioid peptides
b-endorphin
leu-enkaphalin
met-enkaphalin
dynorphin
nociceptin
Enkephalin processing
pro-enkephalin is cleaved by action of proenkephalin convertases guided by dibasic AA sequences
- This can give rise to leu or met enkaphalin depending on tissue specific processing
Why is measuring gene expression of pro-peptides not accurate?
Measuring expression of pro-peptides does not inform which mature peptides are acting in the system
- this only gets more complex due to cellular processing and post-release processing
µ-opioid receptor
most abundant opioid receptor in pain-related regions of the brain
- high affinity for b-endorphin and L/M-enkephalin
k-opioid receptor
has a preference for dynorphin1
NOP opioid receptor
selective for nociceptin