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DSIP

Emideltide, DSIP nonapeptide, Delta sleep-inducing peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 458
Trials 82
Score 2
1995 pubmed

Transport and metabolism of delta sleep-inducing peptide in cultured human intestinal epithelial cell monolayers.

Augustijns. P F PF; Borchardt. R T RT

Key Findings

  • When DSIP is applied to the gut‑side (apical) of intestinal cells, only about 8% remains after 2 hours; most of it turns into the amino acid tryptophan.
  • Adding enzyme inhibitors (bestatin, diprotin A, and captopril) can keep up to 95% of DSIP intact in the gut‑side, but the peptide still never appears on the blood‑side (basolateral).
  • DSIP is more stable when placed on the blood‑side of the cells, suggesting the gut environment is the main barrier to its absorption.

Practical Outcomes

  • Oral DSIP supplements are probably ineffective because the peptide is degraded before it can be absorbed. To get DSIP into the body you’d need non‑oral routes (e.g., sublingual, nasal spray, injection) or formulate it with strong protease inhibitors, which is not practical for most users. This data cautions against expecting oral DSIP to have systemic effects.

Summary

The study shows that the sleep‑inducing peptide DSIP is quickly broken down by enzymes in a model of the human gut lining, and even when enzyme blockers are added it still doesn’t cross the gut barrier, meaning oral pills are unlikely to deliver the peptide to the bloodstream.

Abstract

A cultured human intestinal epithelial (Caco-2) cell monolayer was used to study the transport and metabolism of delta sleep-inducing peptide [DSIP (Trp-Ala-Gly-Gly-Asp-Ala-Ser-Gly-Glu)]. DSIP is of interest because it has been reported to be capable of permeating biological barriers (e.g. blood-brain barrier), and this property has been related to its solution conformation. When applied to the apical (AP) side of Caco-2 cell monolayers, DSIP was rapidly metabolized (8.2 +/- 1.1% remaining after a 2-hr incubation), affording Trp as the major metabolite and Trp-Ala as a minor metabolite. When DSIP was added to the basolateral (BL) side of the monolayer, the same metabolites were detected, but the peptide was more stable (70.6 +/- 3.0% remaining after a 2-hr incubation). Inclusion of bestatin, an inhibitor of aminopeptidases, at concentrations up to 0.29 mM with DSIP on the AP side of the Caco-2 cell monolayer increased the stability of the peptide only slightly but dramatically altered the distribution of the metabolites (Trp-Ala became the major metabolite, and Trp became the minor metabolite). Inclusion of other aminopeptidase inhibitors (e.g. amastatin, puromycin) alone, dipeptidylpeptidase IV inhibitors (e.g. diprotin A, Gly-Pro) alone, inhibitors of proteases that require heavy metals for proper activity (e.g. EDTA, 1,10-phenanthroline) alone, or cysteine protease inhibitors (e.g. leupeptin) alone did not lead to significant stabilization of the peptide. However, inclusion of a combination of 0.29 mM bestatin and 1 mM diprotin A with DSIP on the AP side of the monolayers resulted in a substantial increase in the stability of the peptide (83.2 +/- 3.7% remaining after a 2-hr incubation). However, under these conditions, a new metabolite (Trp-Ala-Gly-Gly-Asp-Ala-Ser) was observed with a formation that could be inhibited by inclusion of 1 mM captopril, an inhibitor of peptidyl dipeptidase A. Therefore, the stability of DSIP could be further increased (95.1 +/- 1.6% remaining after a 2-hr incubation) by incubating the peptide with 0.29 mM bestatin, 1 mM diprotin A, and 1 mM captopril. However, even when the major metabolic pathways were inhibited on the AP side of the cell monolayer, no DSIP was detected on the BL side of a Caco-2 cell monolayer. These results suggest that a yet unidentified metabolic pathway is preventing the AP-to-BL flux of DSIP or that DSIP has lower "intrinsic" ability to permeate across cultured intestinal epithelial cells than across cultured brain endothelial cells, a cell culture model of the blood-brain barrier.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1995