Hachisu M, Hiranuma T, Murata S, Aoyagi T, Umezawa H
Life Sci. 1987 Jul 13;41(2):235-40. doi: 10.1016/0024-3205(87)90498-x.
Actinonin, previously isolated as an antibiotic and shown to be an inhibitor of aminopeptidase M (EC 3.4.11.2), has now been shown to inhibit three enkephalin-degrading enzymes from guinea-pig striatum. The values of IC50 were 0.39 microM for striatal membrane aminopeptidase ("enkephalin-aminopeptidase") and 5.6 microM striatal membrane neutral endopeptidase ("enkephalinase A"). Furthermore, soluble dipeptidylaminopeptidase in a rat whole brain homogenate was also inhibited by actinonin with the IC50 value of 1.1 microM. Actinonin administered intracisternally (i.cist., 50 micrograms) or intraperitoneally (i.p., 100 mg/kg), potentiated the analgesic action of met-enkephalin (50 micrograms i.cist.). analgesia by a tail-flick test. The potentiating activity of actinonin i.p. to met-enkephalin analgesia was almost the same potency as that of thiorphan, whereas the inhibitory activity of actinonin against enkephalinase A was 1/1000 that of thiorphan. Actinonin alone, administered either i.cist. or i.p., showed an analgesic action as estimated by the tail-flick test.