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Vol. 290, Issue 2, 561-568, August 1999
Yakult Central Institute for Microbiological Research,
Kunitachi-shi, Tokyo, Japan (S.T., T.M., T.Y.); Laboratory of
Structure-Function Biochemistry, Department of Molecular Chemistry,
Graduate School of Science, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan (Y.S.,
T.F., T.N.); Division of Molecular Cell Pharmacology, National
Children's Medical Research Center, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo, Japan (Y.N.,
G.T.); Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences, The University
of Tokyo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, Japan (M.N., T. Tsuruo); and Graduate
School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan (T. Terasaki)
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) transport and metabolism of a novel
arginine-vasopressin fragment 4-9 [AVP4-9,
isoelectric point; (pI) = 9.2] analog, that is, cationic
AVP4-9 (C-AVP4-9, PI = 9.8), were examined
in vivo and in vitro. At 45 min after an i.v. administration to mice,
the cerebrum-to-plasma concentration ratios of 35S-labeled
AVP4-9 and 125I-labeled C-AVP4-9
were 0.103 and 0.330 ml/g cerebrum, respectively, and the BBB
permeation clearances were 1.47 × 10
4 and 3.10 × 10
4 ml/min/g cerebrum, respectively. In the in vitro
study using mouse brain capillary endothelial cells immortalized by
SV40 infection (MBEC4), the acid-resistant binding values of
35S-labeled AVP4-9 and 125I-labeled
C-AVP4-9 to MBEC4 at 120 min were 0.93 and 1.95 µl/mg protein (as the cell/medium ratios), respectively.
35S-labeled AVP4-9 showed two-phase saturable
acid-resistant binding, and its half-saturation constants
(KD) were 3.8 nM (high affinity) and 45.7 µM (low affinity). 125I-labeled C-AVP4-9
showed single-phase saturable acid-resistant binding, with a
KD value of 16.4 µM. The acid-resistant
binding of 125I-labeled C-AVP4-9 was
significantly dependent on temperature and medium osmolarity. The
acid-resistant binding of 125I-labeled C-AVP4-9
was inhibited by dancylcadaverine, phenylarsine oxide (endocytosis
inhibitors), 2,4-dinitrophenol (a metabolic inhibitor), and
AVP4-9, poly(L-lysine), and protamine
(cationic substances), but not by poly(L-glutamic
acid) (an anionic peptide) and the V1 and V2
vasopressin receptor antagonists. In addition, the conversion of
C-AVP4-9 to AVP4-9 in the cerebral homogenate was confirmed by HPLC and mass spectrometry. The present results demonstrate that C-AVP4-9 is transported through the BBB
more effectively than AVP4-9, via absorptive-mediated
endocytosis, and that C-AVP4-9 is converted to the
neuroactive parent peptide, AVP4-9, in the cerebrum.
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