Epidermal penetration of a therapeutic peptide by lipid conjugation; Stereo-selective peptide availability of a topical diastereomeric lipopeptide


Autoria(s): Caccetta, R.; Blanchfield, J. T.; Harrison, J.; Toth, I.; Benson, H. A. E.
Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

In inflammatory disorders (e.g. psoriasis), local concentrations of human neutrophil elastase (HNE), also known as polymorphonuclear leukocyte elastase (HLE), possibly overwhelm its natural inhibitors leading to extracellular matrix degradation. Elevated levels of HNE have been reported in a variety of inflammatory disorders, including psoriasis. Peptidic HNE inhibitors have a common hydrophobic sequence (Ala-Ala-Pro-Val). This peptide sequence inhibits HNE competitively; however the stratum corneum presents an effective barrier to the delivery of this tetrapeptide across the skin. The current work investigates the delivery of the modified peptide whereby the tetrapeptide was lipidated to enhance its ability to penetrate the stratum The tetrapeptide Was Coupled to a racaemic mixture of a short chain lipoamino acid (LAA) resulting in two diastereomers of the lipoamino acid-modified tetrapeptide. The penetration of the lipopeptide mixture was assessed across human epidermis in vitro. The percentage of applied dose penetrating to the receptor over 8 h following administration was 2.53% for the D-LAA conjugate and 1.47% for the L-diastereomer, compared to 0% for the peptide. The D-diastereomer appears to be relatively stable but the L-diastereomer appears to degrade releasing possibly the tetrapeptide and peptide fragment(s). Therefore the results clearly indicate that coupling the tetrapeptide to a short chain LAA enhances its delivery across human epidermis.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:79438

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Springer

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Peptide #Enantioselectivity #Lipopeptide #Trans-epidermal Delivery #Lipoamino Acid #Transdermal Delivery #Permeation #Transport #Elastase #Acids #C1 #320501 Pharmaceutical Sciences and Pharmacy #780105 Biological sciences #250302 Biological and Medical Chemistry #780103 Chemical sciences
Tipo

Journal Article