Author/Authors :
Gary Koppel، نويسنده , , Carmen Dodds، نويسنده , , Brenda Houchins، نويسنده , , David Hunden، نويسنده , , C. Douglas Johnson، نويسنده , , Rebecca Owens، نويسنده , , Michael Chaney، نويسنده , , Theodore Usdin، نويسنده , , Beth Hoffman، نويسنده , , Michael Brownstein، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background: Medicinal chemistry traditionally requires the identification of biologically active molecules by synthesizing and screening each purified substrate. Further progress in drug discovery then requires definition of the structure-activity, relationship of the lead compound. More recently, combinatorial chemistry has emerged as a way to examine structure-activity relationships by screening a large mixture of compounds synthesized in a predictably random manner, without the labor-intensive costs of molecular isolation and purification. We set out to use this approach to examine the structural requirements for peptide binding to serotonin and dopamine transporters.
Results: We screened a tripeptide cassette library for serotonin and dopamine reuptake inhibition using cloned transporter assay systems. The method has afforded a number of tripeptide pharmacophores with inhibitory IC50 values ranging from 10 μM to < 1 μM in the dopamine and serotonin reuptake systems. The conformation of one of these tripeptides, N-acetyl-d-Trp-t-Phe-d-Lys-CONH2 (which inhibits serotonin uptake with an IC50 of 10 μM) was compared to that of the serotonin uptake inhibitor s-fluoxetine, and was shown to be more similar in conformation to fluoxetine than was an analogous tripeptide containing l-Lys (IC 50 > 50 μM).
Conclusions: We have identified five tripeptides with inhibitory IC50 values of < 10 μM in the serotonin reuptake system. One tripeptide was predicted to have pharmacophore features similar to that of fluoxetine, a selective and potent non-peptide serotonin reuptake inhibitor. Our results suggest that tripeptides derived from combinatorial libraries will help to define the important structural elements of pharmacophores.
Keywords :
* combinatorial libraries , * dopamine reuptake inhibitors , * molecular modeling , * serotonin reuptake inhibitors