Degradation of the ACTH(4-10) analog Semax in the presence of rat basal forebrain cell cultures and plasma membranes.
Zolotarev. Yu A YA; Dolotov. O V OV; Inozemtseva. L S LS; Dadayan. A K AK; Dorokhova. E M EM; Andreeva. L A LA; Alfeeva. L Yu LY; Grivennikov. I A IA; Myasoedov. N F NF
Key Findings
- Semax is rapidly degraded into ME and GP fragments and pentapeptides in rat brain cell cultures and plasma membranes
- Glial and neuronal cells produce slightly different degradation patterns
- The isotopic‑labeling method enables detailed tracking of peptide breakdown in biological tissues
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY biohackers, the main takeaway is that semax may have a short active lifespan in the brain, so delivery methods that protect it from rapid breakdown could be important. This insight suggests exploring stabilized formulations or alternative routes (e.g., intranasal sprays with protective carriers) to maintain its effectiveness.
Summary
The study shows that the brain‑active peptide semax breaks down quickly into smaller pieces when it contacts brain cell membranes, especially splitting into ME and GP fragments and forming some five‑amino‑acid pieces. The breakdown patterns differ a bit between support (glial) cells and nerve (neuronal) cells. The researchers also introduced a new way to track these changes using isotopic labeling.
Abstract
Here a new approach of the elucidation of paths of proteolytic biodegradation of physiologically active peptides, based on the use of a peptide with isotopic label at all amino acid residues and the enrichment of HPLC samples with unlabeled peptide fragments in UV-detectable concentration, has been proposed. The method has been applied for the investigation of degradation dynamics of the neuroactive heptapeptide MEHFPGP (Semax) in the presence of plasma membranes, and cultures of glial and neuronal cells obtained from the rat basal forebrain. The splitting away of ME and GP, and formation of pentapeptides are the predominant processes in the presence of all tested objects, whereas the difference in patterns of resulting peptide products for glial and neuronal cells has been detected. In conclusion, the approach applied allows analyzing physiologically active peptide concentrations in biological tissues and degradation pathways of peptides in the presence of targets of their action.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
2006-05-26T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s00726-006-0328-8
14
33