The early initiation of binge-drinking and biological sex are critical risk factors for the development of affective disturbances and cognitive decline, as well as neurodegenerative diseases including Show more
The early initiation of binge-drinking and biological sex are critical risk factors for the development of affective disturbances and cognitive decline, as well as neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease. Further, a history of excessive alcohol consumption alters normal age-related changes in the pattern of protein expression in the brain, which may relate to an acceleration of cognitive decline. Here, we aimed to disentangle the interrelation between a history of binge-drinking during adolescence, biological sex and normal aging on the manifestation of negative affect, cognitive decline and associated biochemical pathology. To this end, adolescent male and female C57BL/6J mice (PND 28-29) underwent 30 days of alcohol binge-drinking using a modified drinking-in-the-dark (DID) paradigm. Then, mice were assayed for negative affect, sensorimotor gating and cognition at three developmental stages during adulthood-mature adulthood (6 months), pre-middle age (9 months) and middle age (12 months). Behavioural testing was then followed by immunoblotting to index the protein expression of glutamate receptors, neuropathological markers [Tau, p (Thr217)-Tau, p (Ser396)-Tau, BACE, APP, Aβ], as well as ERK activation within the entorhinal cortex, prefrontal cortex and amygdala. Across this age span, we detected only a few age-related changes in our measures of negative affect or spatial learning/memory in the Morris water maze and all of these changes were sex-specific. Prior adolescent binge-drinking impaired behaviour only during reversal learning in 9-month-old females and during radial arm maze testing in 12-month-old females. In contrast to behaviour, we detected a large number of protein changes related to prior binge-drinking history, several of which manifested as early as 6 months of age, with the prefrontal cortex particularly affected at this earlier age. While 6-month-old mice exhibited relatively few alcohol-related protein changes within the entorhinal cortex and amygdala, the number of alcohol-related protein changes within the entorhinal cortex increased with age, while the 12-month-old mice exhibited the largest number of protein changes within the amygdala. Approximately a third of the alcohol-related protein changes were sex-selective. Taken together, the results of our longitudinal study using a murine model of binge-drinking indicate that a prior history of heavy alcohol consumption, beginning in adolescence, is sufficient to induce what we presume to be latent changes in protein indices of cellular activity, glutamate transmission and neuropathology within key brain regions governing cognition, executive function and emotion that appear to precede the onset of robust behavioural signs of dysregulated affect and cognitive impairment. Show less
During the development of a melanocortin (MC) peptide drug to treat the condition of cachexia (a hypermetabolic state producing lean body mass wasting), we were confronted with the need for peptide tr Show more
During the development of a melanocortin (MC) peptide drug to treat the condition of cachexia (a hypermetabolic state producing lean body mass wasting), we were confronted with the need for peptide transport across the blood-brain barrier (BBB): the MC-4 receptors (MC4Rs) for metabolic rate control are located in the hypothalamus, i.e., behind the BBB. Using the term "peptides with BBB transport", we screened the medical literature like a peptide library. This revealed numerous "hits"-peptides with BBB transport and/or oral activity. We noted several features common to most peptides in this class, including a dipeptide sequence of nonpolar residues, primary structure cyclization (whole or partial), and a Pro-aromatic motif usually within the cyclized region. Based on this, we designed an MC4R antagonist peptide, TCMCB07, that successfully treated many forms of cachexia. As part of our pharmacokinetic characterization of TCMCB07, we discovered that hepatobiliary extraction from blood accounted for a majority of the circulating peptide's excretion. Further screening of the literature revealed that TCMCB07 is a member of a long-forgotten peptide class, showing active transport by a multi-specific bile salt carrier. Bile salt transport peptides have predictable pharmacokinetics, including BBB transport, but rapid hepatic clearance inhibited their development as drugs. TCMCB07 shares the general characteristics of the bile salt peptide class but with a much longer half-life of hours, not minutes. A change in its C-terminal amino acid sequence slows hepatic clearance. This modification is transferable to other peptides in this class, suggesting a platform approach for producing drug-like peptides. Show less