Opioid receptor affinity and selectivity effects of second residue and carboxy terminal residue variation in a cyclic disulfide-containing opioid tetrapeptide

Abstract
The previously described cyclic, delta opioid receptor-selective tetrapeptide H-Tyr-D-Cys-Phe-D-Pen-OH, where Pen, penicillamine, is beta-beta-dimethylcysteine, was modified at residues 2 and 4 by varying combinations of D- and L-Cys and D- and L-Pen, and effects on mu and delta opioid receptor binding affinities and on potency in the mouse vas deferens (MVD) smooth muscle assay were evaluated. A comparison was drawn between consequences of alterations in this series of analogs and those of analogous modifications in the related cyclic pentapeptide series which includes the highly delta receptor-selective [D-Pen2,D-Pen5]enkephalin, DPDPE. Unlike effects observed in the cyclic pentapeptide series, the mu receptor binding affinities of the cyclic tetrapeptides are not dramatically influenced by substitution of Pen for Cys at residue 2. Conversely, while binding of the pentapeptides is only slightly affected by alteration of the chirality of the carboxy-terminal residue, modification of stereochemistry at the carboxy terminus in the tetrapeptides critically alters binding behavior at both mu and delta sites. In contrast with the pentapeptide series, the tetrapeptides appear to be highly dependent upon primary sequence for binding and activity, as only the lead compound binds with high affinity to the delta site. Results suggest that the less flexible cyclic tetrapeptides, lacking the Gly3 residue, display more stringent structural requirements for binding and activity than do the corresponding cyclic pentapeptides.