Saturable mechanism for delta sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP) at the blood-brain barrier of the vascularly perfused guinea pig brain.
Zlokovic. B V BV; Susic. V T VT; Davson. H H; Begley. D J DJ; Jankov. R M RM; Mitrovic. D M DM; Lipovac. M N MN
Key Findings
- DSIP crosses the blood‑brain barrier in guinea‑pig brain tissue via a saturable, high‑affinity transport mechanism.
- Adding extra (unlabelled) DSIP or L‑tryptophan dramatically reduces DSIP’s brain uptake, indicating competition at the transport site.
- A vasopressin analogue ([Arg8]-VP) only modestly inhibits DSIP transport, and only at very high concentrations.
Practical Outcomes
- DSIP is capable of reaching the brain, so oral or injectable use could have central effects. However, the transport can become saturated, so taking very high doses may not increase brain levels proportionally. Co‑consuming large amounts of tryptophan (or tryptophan‑rich foods) might blunt DSIP’s entry into the brain, while typical vasopressin levels are unlikely to matter. These insights are mainly mechanistic and don’t yet translate into specific dosing protocols.
Summary
The study shows that the peptide delta sleep‑inducing peptide (DSIP) can get into the brain by a special, high‑affinity transport system at the blood‑brain barrier, but this system can be blocked by the same peptide, the amino acid L‑tryptophan, or very high levels of a vasopressin analogue.
Abstract
Cellular uptake of [125I] labelled DSIP at the luminal interface of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) was studied in the ipsilateral perfused in situ guinea pig forebrain. Regional unidirectional transfer constants (Kin) calculated from the multiple-time brain uptake analysis were 0.93, 1.33 and 1.66 microliter.min-1 g-1 for the parietal cortex, caudate nucleus and hippocampus, respectively. In the presence of 7 microM unlabelled DSIP the brain uptake of [125I]-DSIP (0.3 nM) was inhibited, the values of Kin being reduced to 0.23-0.38 microliter.min-1 g-1, values that were comparable with the Kin for mannitol. The rapidly equilibrating space of brain, measured from the intercept of the line describing brain uptake versus time on the brain uptake ordinate, Vi, was greater for [125I]-DSIP than for mannitol; in the presence of unlabelled DSIP this was reduced to that of mannitol, and it was suggested that the larger volume for [125I]-DSIP represented binding at specific sites on the brain capillary membrane. L-tryptophan, the N-terminal residue of DSIP, in concentrations of 7 microM and 1 mM, inhibited Kin without affecting Vi. A moderate inhibition of Kin was obtained by vasopressin ([Arg8]-VP), but only at a concentration as high as 0.2 mM. The results suggest the presence of a high affinity saturable mechanism for transport of DSIP across the blood-brain barrier, with subsequent uptake at brain sites that are highly sensitive to L-tryptophan, and may be modulated by [Arg8]-VP.
Study Information
pubmed
1989
1989-03-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/0196-9781(89)90026-0
32
48