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Selank

Selanc, TP-7

Quick Stats
Studies 114
Trials 11
Score 2
2006 pubmed

[Evenly tritium-labeled peptides and their in vivo and in vitro biodegradation].

Zolotarev. Iu A IuA; Dadaian. A K AK; Dolotov. O V OV; Kozik. V S VS; Kost. N V NV; Sokolov. O Iu OIu; Dorokhova. E M EM; Meshavkin. V K VK; Inozemtseva. L S LS; Gabaeva. M V MV; Andreeva. L A LA; Alfeeva. L Iu LIu; Pavlov. T S TS; Badmaeva. K E KE; Badmaeva. S E SE; Bakaeva. Z V ZV; Kopylova. G N GN; Samonina. G E GE; Vas'kovskiĭ. B V BV; Grivennikov. I A IA; Zozulia. A A AA; Miasoedov. N F NF

Key Findings

  • Selank is rapidly degraded into specific smaller fragments (TKPRP, TKP, RP, GP) after intranasal administration
  • The labeling method allows precise measurement of peptide levels and their breakdown products in tissues
  • Semax strongly inhibits blood‑plasma enkephalinases by acting on aminopeptidases

Practical Outcomes

  • For self‑experimenters, the data suggest that Selank’s effects may be short‑lived, so more frequent dosing or sustained‑release formulations might be needed. Intranasal delivery does get the peptide into the brain, but expect rapid metabolism into smaller peptides, which could have their own activity or be cleared quickly.

Summary

The study used a special radioactive labeling technique to track how the anxiety‑relief peptide Selank breaks down in the body. It showed that after intranasal use, Selank reaches the brain but is quickly split into smaller pieces like TKPRP, TKP, RP and GP. The same method also revealed how a related peptide, Semax, is degraded and that it can block certain enzymes in blood plasma.

Abstract

Biologically active peptides evenly labeled with tritium were used for studying the in vitro and in vivo biodegradation of the peptides. Tritium-labeled peptides with a specific radioactivity of 50-150 Ci/mmol were obtained by high temperature solid phase catalytic isotope exchange (HSCIE) with spillover tritium. The distribution of the isotope label among all amino acid residues of these peptides allows the simultaneous determination of practically all possible products of their enzymatic hydrolysis. The developed analytical method includes extraction of tritium-labeled peptides from organism tissues and chromatographic isolation of individual labeled peptides from the mixture of degradation products. The concentrations of a peptide under study and the products of its biodegradation were calculated from the results of liquid scintillation counting. This approach was used for studying the pathways of biodegradation of the heptapeptide TKPRPGP (Selank) and the tripeptide PGP in blood plasma. The pharmacokinetics of Selank, an anxiolytic peptide, was also studied in brain tissues using the intranasal in vivo administration of this peptide. The concentrations of labeled peptides were determined, and the pentapeptide TKPRP, tripeptide TKP, and dipeptides RP and GP were shown to be the major products of Selank biodegradation. The study of the biodegradation of the heptapeptide MEHFPGP (Semax) in the presence of nerve cells showed that the major products of its biodegradation are the pentapeptide HFPGP and tripeptide PGP. The enkephalinase activity of blood plasma was studied with the use of evenly tritium-labeled [Leu]enkephalin. A high inhibitory effect of Semax on blood plasma enkephalinases was shown to arise from its action on aminopeptidases. The method, based on the use of evenly tritium-labeled peptides, allows the determination of peptide concentrations and the activity of enzymes involved in their degradation on a tg scale of biological samples both in vitro and in vivo.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006