Sea Anemone Kunitz-Type Peptides Demonstrate Neuroprotective Activity in the 6-Hydroxydopamine Induced Neurotoxicity Model

Sintsova, Oksana and Gladkikh, Irina and Monastyrnaya, Margarita and Tabakmakher, Valentin and Yurchenko, Ekaterina and Menchinskaya, Ekaterina and Pislyagin, Evgeny and Andreev, Yaroslav and Kozlov, Sergey and Peigneur, Steve and Tytgat, Jan and Aminin, Dmitry and Kozlovskaya, Emma and Leychenko, Elena (2021) Sea Anemone Kunitz-Type Peptides Demonstrate Neuroprotective Activity in the 6-Hydroxydopamine Induced Neurotoxicity Model. Biomedicines, 9 (3). p. 283. ISSN 2227-9059

[thumbnail of biomedicines-09-00283-v2.pdf] Text
biomedicines-09-00283-v2.pdf - Published Version

Download (3MB)

Abstract

Kunitz-type peptides from venomous animals have been known to inhibit different proteinases and also to modulate ion channels and receptors, demonstrating analgesic, anti-inflammatory, anti-histamine and many other biological activities. At present, there is evidence of their neuroprotective effects. We have studied eight Kunitz-type peptides of the sea anemone Heteractis crispa to find molecules with cytoprotective activity in the 6-OHDA-induced neurotoxicity model on neuroblastoma Neuro-2a cells. It has been shown that only five peptides significantly increase the viability of neuronal cells treated with 6-OHDA. The TRPV1 channel blocker, HCRG21, has revealed the neuroprotective effect that could be indirect evidence of TRPV1 involvement in the disorders associated with neurodegeneration. The pre-incubation of Neuro-2a cells with HCRG21 followed by 6-OHDA treatment has resulted in a prominent reduction in ROS production compared the untreated cells. It is possible that the observed effect is due to the ability of the peptide act as an efficient free-radical scavenger. One more leader peptide, InhVJ, has shown a neuroprotective activity and has been studied at concentrations of 0.01–10.0 µM. The target of InhVJ is still unknown, but it was the best of all eight homologous peptides in an absolute cell viability increment on 38% of the control in the 6-OHDA-induced neurotoxicity model. The targets of the other three active peptides remain unknown.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Open Library Press > Biological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@openlibrarypress.com
Date Deposited: 04 Jan 2023 07:27
Last Modified: 04 Jan 2023 07:27
URI: https://openlibrarypress.com/id/eprint/63

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item