Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2008663 | Peptides | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The activity of a series of synthetic tachykinin-like peptide analogs was studied by means of microscopic calcium imaging on recombinant neurokinin receptor expressing cell lines. A C-terminal pentapeptide (FTGMRa) is sufficient for activation of the stomoxytachykinin receptor (STKR) expressed in Schneider 2 cells. Replacement of amino acid residues at the position of the conserved phenylalanine (F) or arginine (R) residues by alanine (A) results in inactive peptides (when tested at 1 μM), whereas A-replacements at other positions do not abolish the biological activity of the resulting insectatachykinin-like analogs. Calcium imaging was also employed to compare the activity of C-terminally substituted tachykinin analogs on three different neurokinin receptors. The results indicate that the major pharmacological and evolutionary difference between tachykinin-related agonists for insect (STKR) and human (NK1 and NK2) receptors resides in the C-terminal amino acid residues (R versus M). A single C-terminal amino acid change can turn an STKR-agonist into an NK-agonist and vice versa.
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Authors
Herbert Torfs, Karl E. Ã
kerman, Ronald J. Nachman, Hendrica B. Oonk, Michel Detheux, Jeroen Poels, Tom Van Loy, Arnold De Loof, Rob H. Meloen, Gilbert Vassart, Marc Parmentier, Jozef Vanden Broeck,