Bradykinin antagonists: present progress and future prospects.

J M Stewart, L Gera, E J York, D C Chan, P Bunn
Author Information
  1. J M Stewart: Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Colorado Medical School, Denver 80262, USA. john.stewart@uchsc.edu

Abstract

Bradykinin (BK) antagonist peptides have been powerful tools for delineating roles of kinins in both normal and pathological physiology and offer promise of drug development for a variety of inflammatory conditions and cancers. At the present time, potent peptide antagonists are available that are either specific for BK B1 or B2 receptors, or are effective on both receptor classes. Non-peptide BK B2 antagonists are now being announced and are under investigation in several companies. The best peptide B1-B2 peptide antagonist is stable against all kininases, is orally available, and has a very long lifetime in vivo. Certain dimers of this antagonist, as well as several smaller molecules, are active against several cancers, both in vitro and in vivo.

Grants

  1. HL-26284/NHLBI NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Amino Acid Sequence
Animals
Antineoplastic Agents
Bradykinin
Humans
Molecular Sequence Data

Chemicals

Antineoplastic Agents
Bradykinin

Word Cloud

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