Affiliation:
1. Kyoto University
2. Kazusa DNA Research Institute
3. Kameda Seika Co., Ltd.
Abstract
Abstract
It is ideal to ingest bioactive substances from daily foods to stay healthy. Rice is the staple food for almost half of the human population. We found that an orally administered enzymatic digest of rice endosperm protein exhibits antidepressant-like effects in the tail suspension test (TST) using mice. We performed a comprehensive peptide analysis of the digest using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, and the tridecapeptide QQFLPEGQSQSQK emerged as a candidate of the antidepressant-like peptide. Oral administration of the chemosynthetic peptide exhibited antidepressant-like effects at a low dose comparable to known drugs in the TST. This also exhibited anti-depressant-like effect in the forced swim test. We named it rice endosperm-derived antidepressant-like peptide (REAP). Intriguingly, intraperitoneal administration had no effect. Orally administered REAP(8–13) but not REAP(1–7) exhibited antidepressant-like activity, suggesting that the C-terminal structure is important for the antidepressant-like effect. We confirmed the presence of REAP, corresponding to rice glutelin type B4(130–142) and B5(130–142), in the digest. The effects of REAP were blocked by either intraperitoneal or intracerebroventricular administration of a dopamine D1 antagonist; however, REAP had no affinity for the receptor. These results suggest that it exerts its antidepressant-like activity through promotion of endogenous dopamine release and activation of central D1 receptors. REAP-induced antidepressant-like effect was at least in part blocked by vagotomy, implying the gut-brain communication is associated with REAP’s effect. Taken together, oral administration of a novel tridecapeptide exhibited antidepressant-like effects via the dopamine D1 system. This is the first report of a rice-derived peptide that exhibits antidepressant-like effects.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Cited by
2 articles.
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