Novel platform for the preparation of synthetic orally active peptidomimetics with hemoregulating activity. II. Hemosuppressor activity of 2,5-diketopiperazine-based cyclopeptides.
Deigin. Vladislav V; Ksenofontova. Olga O; Yatskin. Oleg O; Goryacheva. Alexandra A; Ignatova. Anastasia A; Feofanov. Alexey A; Ivanov. Vadim V
Key Findings
- The D‑Glu‑D‑Trp dipeptide (Thymodepressin) inhibits proliferation of hematopoietic progenitor cells, acting as an immunosuppressor.
- Cyclizing the dipeptide into a 2,5‑diketopiperazine (DKP) ring retains the suppressor activity and makes the compound orally bioavailable.
- Enantiomeric (mirror‑image) forms of the same peptide can have opposite biological effects, demonstrating a rare reciprocal activity phenomenon.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in immune modulation, this work suggests that oral, ring‑shaped versions of D‑Glu‑D‑Trp could theoretically be used to dampen immune activity, but no human dosing or safety data are provided. Until further studies confirm efficacy and safety, the findings are mainly of scientific interest rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol.
Summary
Scientists created new oral versions of a tiny protein fragment (a dipeptide) that can calm down the bone‑marrow blood‑forming system. The original Glu‑Trp peptide boosts immunity (the drug Thymogen), but flipping both amino acids to their mirror‑image (D‑Glu‑D‑Trp) flips the effect, suppressing blood‑cell growth. The study shows this flip works even when the peptide is built into a ring‑shaped molecule that can be taken by mouth.
Abstract
The novel chemical platform formed by the branched piperazine-2,5-dione peptide derivatives (2,5-diketopiperazines) for creating non-invasive biologically active peptidomimetics has been developed. A successful application of this approach to orally available hemostimulatory peptidomimetics was demonstrated for all-L cyclopeptide from the Glu-Trp-peptide family. In the 1980s, we have separated and characterized a number of dipeptides from the thymus homogenate. The most active peptide Glu-Trp has been studied and developed into the immunostimulating drug Thymogen. The inversion of the amino acid optical form endows the dipeptides with suppressor properties: D-Glu-D-Trp-OH and D-Glu-(D-Trp)-OH, inhibit proliferation of hemopoietic progenitors in the intact bone marrow. Based on the peptide D-Glu-(D-Trp)-OH, the new immunosuppressive drug Thymodepressin has been prepared. In this work, we applied the platform mentioned above to the design and synthesis of orally active hemosuppressive Thymodepressin® analogs. The novel data for the hemosuppressor activity of the dipeptide D-Glu(D-Trp-OH)-OH and its cyclopeptide analogs are discussed. A new example is presented of a rare phenomenon when enantiomeric molecules demonstrate reciprocal (i.e., opposite) biological activities.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-02-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.intimp.2020.106185
15
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