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Bradykinin-potentiating peptide family
(or proline-rich peptide family)
General
Activity
Bradykinin-potentiating peptides (BPPs) are short peptides only found in venoms of snakes and spiders and in amphibian skin secretions. They potentiate the hypotensive cardiovascular response to bradykinin (for a description of this peptide, see
bradykinin-related peptide family
). However, the exact mechanism of action of BPPs remains unclear. Some of them inhibit somatic
angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)
, a vasoconstrictor that converts
angiotensin-1 to angiotensin-2
and degrades bradykinin. Other BPPs display a strong and sustained anti-hypertensive effect by a pharmacological effect independent of ACE inhibition. As examples, the
snake peptide BPP-10c
is the most selective inhibitor of the active site at the C-domain of ACE, and displays a strong and sustained anti-hypertensive effect independently of the inhibition of ACE. This peptide has been described as being a direct activator of the intracellular
argininosuccinate synthase
, an enzyme implicated in different cycles, including the citrulline-nitric oxide (NO) cycle that represents a potential limiting step in NO synthesis (
Guerreiro et al., 2009
). In another study, this is the NO production induced by BPPs that explains hypotension. Indeed,
BPP-5a
increases NO production in HEK293 cell line, which is mediated by the two receptors bradykinin receptors B2 and muscarinic acetylcholine receptor M1 (
Morais et al., 2011
).
Sequence characteristics
The most characteristic structural features of this family is the short size of the peptides (5-13 amino acid residues), an invariable N-terminal pyroglutamate residue (pGlu or Z) and two consecutive proline residues at the C-terminus.
Miscellaneous
The chemical and pharmacological properties of BPPs were essential for the development of captopril (
wikipedia
,
DrugBank
), the first active site directed inhibitor of ACE, currently used to treat human hypertension.
Link
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Protein family
Activity
Hypotensive agent
Metalloprotease inhibitor
Related protein family
Natriuretic peptides
that are released from bradykinin-potentiating peptide--natriuretic peptide precursors.
This protein family in
Snake
Spider
All
Bradykinin-potentiating peptides in
scorpion
do not belong to the bradykinin-potentiating peptide family described here. They belong to the scorpion BPP family and UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot entries can be found
here
.