4.7 Article

Behavioral Effects and Analgesic Profile of Hemoglobin-Derived Valorphin and Its Synthetic Analog in Rodents

Journal

BIOMEDICINES
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines11102783

Keywords

hemorphins; phosphopeptide analog of valorphin; antinociception; inflammation; behavior; opioids

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This study reveals the antinociceptive mechanisms and behavioral effects of valorphin and its derivative. These peptides can reduce acute and inflammatory pain by activating different types of opioid receptors. In addition, valorphin induces depression-like behavior, while V2p shows a tendency towards anxiolysis and short-term impairment of motor coordination.
Valorphin (V1) is a naturally occurring peptide derived from hemoglobin that has been found to have an affinity for opioid receptors and exhibits antinociceptive and anticonvulsant activity. Some of its synthetic analogs containing an aminophosphonate moiety show structure-dependent potent antinociceptive effects. This study aimed to reveal a detailed picture of the antinociceptive mechanisms and behavioral effects of V1 and its recently synthesized phosphopeptide analog V2p in rodents using a range of methods. The studied peptides significantly reduced acute (mean V1-9.0, V2p-5.8 vs. controls-54.1 s) and inflammatory (mean V1-57.9 and V2p-53.3 vs. controls-107.6 s) nociceptive pain in the formalin test, as well as carrageenan-induced hyperalgesia (mean V1-184.7 and V2p-107.3 vs. controls-61.8 g) in the paw pressure test. These effects are mediated by activation of opioid receptors with a predominance of kappa in V1 antinociception and by delta, kappa, and mu receptors in V2p-induced antinociception. Both peptides did not change the levels of TNF-alpha and IL-1-beta in blood serum. V1 induces depression-like behavior, and V2p shows a tendency toward anxiolysis and short-term impairment of motor coordination without affecting exploratory behavior. The results characterize valorphin and its derivative as promising analgesics that exert their effects both centrally and peripherally, without causing severe behavioral changes in experimental animals. These encouraging data are a foundation for future studies focusing on the effects of hemorphins after long-term treatment.

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