1. Academic Validation
  2. Structural Design of Oligopeptides for Intestinal Transport Model

Structural Design of Oligopeptides for Intestinal Transport Model

  • J Agric Food Chem. 2016 Mar 16;64(10):2072-9. doi: 10.1021/acs.jafc.6b00279.
Seong-Min Hong 1 Mitsuru Tanaka 1 Riho Koyanagi 1 Weilin Shen 1 Toshiro Matsui 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Division of Bioresources and Bioenvironmental Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture, Graduate School, Kyushu University , 6-10-1 Hakozaki, Higashi-ku, Fukuoka 812-8581, Japan.
Abstract

Glycyl-sarcosine (Gly-Sar) is a well-known model substrate for the intestinal uptake of dipeptides through peptide transporter 1 (PepT1). However, there are no other model Peptides larger than tripeptides to evaluate their intestinal transport ability. In this study, we designed new oligopeptides based on the Gly-Sar structure in terms of protease resistance. Gly-Sar-Sar was found to be an appropriate transport model for tripeptides because it does not degrade during the transport across the rat intestinal membrane, while Gly-Gly-Sar was degraded to Gly-Sar during the 60 min transport. Caco-2 cell transport experiments revealed that the designed oligopeptides based on Gly-Sar-Sar showed a significantly (p < 0.05) lower transport ability by factors of 1/10-, 1/25-, and 1/40-fold for Gly-Sar-Sar, Gly-Sar-Sar-Sar, and Gly-Sar-Sar-Sar-Sar, respectively, compared to Gly-Sar (apparent permeability coefficient: 38.6 ± 11.4 cm/s). Cell experiments also showed that the designed tripeptide and Gly-Sar were transported across Caco-2 cell via PepT1, whereas the tetra- and pentapeptides were transported through the paracellular tight-junction pathway.

Keywords

intestinal absorption; oligopeptide; paracellular transport; peptide transporter 1; tight junction.

Figures
Products