Transporter
may allow safer pain meds
by Toni Baker
A transporter that silences one of the
body’s natural pain killers holds promise for new medicines as well as
understanding AIDS patients’ increased pain perception, researchers say.
Opioid peptides are natural pain relievers
with receptors – first identified because they react to opium – throughout
the body, said Dr. Vadivel Ganapathy, chair of the Department of
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. Studies have shown, for example, opioid
peptide levels increase during childbirth. Pain killers such as morphine and
codeine override this natural pain control system by directly activating
opioid peptide receptors. While pain control is effective, risk factors
include addiction, immune suppression and constipation.
Researchers hope to develop safer pain
killers that augment the body’s natural pain-killing ability by targeting
instead the opioid peptide transport system that terminates pain-control
communication. “This has the potential for non-addictive pain killers that
are effective, but by a different mechanism,” said Dr. Ganapathy.
Many antidepressants work similarly,
prolonging the action of neurotransmitters by keeping them from being taken
back up into the neuron by transport systems. Chemical messengers naturally
have limited action, but depressed patients have insufficient levels of
chemicals for adequate communication between neurons. Antidepressants
provide more mileage from existing neurotransmitters.
Dr. Ganapathy hopes to do the same with
endogenous pain killers. Armed with a two-year, $286,000 grant from the
National Institute on Drug Abuse, he is working to clone the opioid peptide
transporter he identified three years ago and identify the responsible gene
and protein.
Interestingly, he also has found that mice
expressing one of the HIV proteins have increased activity of this
transporter, a finding that might explain HIV patients’ increased pain
perception. “That means the normal endogenous activity of this transport
system is higher in HIV patients, so natural pain mechanisms are not working
that well,” said Dr. Ganapathy.
The National Institute on Drug Abuse asked
him to apply for the Cutting Edge Basic Research Grant – which enables quick
review for funding of novel ideas – to pursue this hypothesis as well as the
molecular analysis of the transporter.
The idea that a transport system is involved
is itself a novel concept. Conventional wisdom was that an enzyme was
responsible for hydrolyzing, or decomposing, opioid peptide. This is the
case for at least one neurotransmitter – acetylcholine, implicated in
Alzheimer’s - which is inactivated by an enzyme, rather than being
transported back into the neuron like other neurotransmitters, such as
serotonin, which has a role in depression.
But when Dr. Ganapathy watched the activity
of opioid peptides, he saw it actively taken back up into the neuronal
cells.
Cloning the transporter and dissecting its
molecular profile will ultimately provide a model for studying whether
naturally occurring or designer drugs block this re-uptake. The National
Institute on Drug Abuse will provide Dr. Ganapathy with several synthetic
opioid peptides to see whether they are substrates, or blockers, of this
transport system.
“We know this recognizes peptides.
Therefore, any chemical compound that will block the transport function must
have some resemblance to its natural substrate. Otherwise, it might not do
the job,” Dr. Ganapathy said.
He is already testing naturally occurring
amino acids and peptides and identified one – lysine, an essential amino
acid vital to growth and found in high concentrations in red meat, cheeses,
poultry, sardines, nuts, eggs and soybeans – as a good fit. “We may be able
to take this compound as a starting point, then add a few things to make it
more effective. You could have a lysine-based drug for the treatment of
pain, maybe even a nutritional supplement to prevent pain,” said Dr.
Ganapathy. “You could use such a treatment to block this transport activity
for HIV patients as well as other patients to control pain.”
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