A polypeptide and use thereof in the preparation of a medicament for ischemic stroke

By developing the peptide TN-PR, the problem of insufficient multi-target drugs in the treatment of ischemic stroke has been solved, achieving multi-level protection against ischemic stroke, significantly reducing cerebral infarction volume and oxidative stress, and improving neurological function.

CN122145567APending Publication Date: 2026-06-05HEBEI ZHITONG BIOLOGICAL PHARMA

Patent Information

Authority / Receiving Office
CN · China
Patent Type
Applications(China)
Current Assignee / Owner
HEBEI ZHITONG BIOLOGICAL PHARMA
Filing Date
2026-04-16
Publication Date
2026-06-05

AI Technical Summary

Technical Problem

Existing drugs for ischemic stroke treatment have problems such as a narrow treatment window, high risk of bleeding, easy to cause ischemia-reperfusion injury, and neuroprotective agents mostly have single-target effects and cannot effectively block complex pathological cascade reactions. There is a lack of safe and effective multi-target drugs.

Method used

A polypeptide (TN-PR) with the amino acid sequence TNPWSPR is provided. It can penetrate the blood-brain barrier and regulate the complex pathological cascade of ischemic stroke through multi-target synergistic regulation. It can inhibit oxidative stress, reduce neuronal apoptosis, and protect the ischemic penumbra and blood-brain barrier. It is prepared by conventional solid-phase synthesis method and its in vivo and in vitro pharmacodynamics are verified.

Benefits of technology

It significantly reduces cerebral infarction volume, lowers the level of the oxidative stress marker MDA, protects neurons and vascular endothelial cells, improves neurological prognosis, has the potential for multi-target intervention, and overcomes the technical bottlenecks of existing drugs.

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Abstract

The application relates to the technical field of medicines, and particularly discloses a polypeptide and application of the polypeptide in preparation of a medicine for ischemic stroke. The amino acid sequence of the polypeptide is as shown in SEQ ID NO. 1. The polypeptide can significantly improve the nerve function defect of a mouse transient middle cerebral artery occlusion / reperfusion (tMCAO / R) model in vivo, reduce the cerebral infarction volume, and reduce the whole-body oxidative stress level. In vitro, the polypeptide has a direct protective effect on HT22 cells of mouse hippocampal neurons and hCMEC / D3 cells of human brain microvascular endothelium induced by oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD), can resist the damage of corticosterone and MPP + induced PC12 cells, and effectively inhibits the accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in cells. The results show that the polypeptide has a multi-target cell protection activity, can play an anti-ischemic stroke role from multiple dimensions such as reduction of infarction volume, inhibition of oxidative stress level, and protection of nerve vascular units.
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Description

Technical Field

[0001] This invention relates to the field of biomedical technology, and in particular to a polypeptide and its application in the preparation of drugs for ischemic stroke. Background Technology

[0002] Ischemic stroke is a common cerebrovascular disease caused by cerebral vascular occlusion, leading to localized brain tissue ischemia and hypoxic necrosis, and subsequently, neurological deficits. It is characterized by high incidence, high disability rate, high mortality rate, and high recurrence rate, and has become a major global public health problem. With the increasing aging population and changing lifestyles, the disease burden of ischemic stroke continues to rise, placing a heavy burden on patients' families and the social healthcare system. The pathological mechanism of ischemic stroke is complex, involving multiple cascades of pathological processes such as energy metabolism failure, excitatory amino acid toxicity, oxidative stress damage, inflammatory response, and apoptosis. Neurons in the ischemic penumbra region continue to suffer progressive damage even after vascular recanalization, severely affecting patient prognosis and neurological function recovery.

[0003] Current clinical treatment of ischemic stroke recanalization is the core strategy, mainly including intravenous thrombolysis within 4.5 hours of onset and endovascular mechanical thrombectomy within 6 hours. While commonly used drugs such as recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA) can achieve recanalization, they have limitations such as a strict treatment time window, high bleeding risk, and a tendency to induce ischemia-reperfusion injury. Many patients do not receive effective treatment due to pre-hospital delays. Antiplatelet and anticoagulant drugs are only used to prevent thrombosis progression and for secondary prevention, and cannot directly reverse neuronal damage in the acute ischemic phase. Although neuroprotection is an important direction for prolonging the treatment time window and improving prognosis, existing neuroprotective agents mostly act on single targets and cannot block complex pathological cascades. They also suffer from poor blood-brain barrier penetration, insufficient safety, and poor clinical translation. Clinically, there is a long-standing lack of safe, highly effective, and multi-target innovative drugs that can simultaneously provide neuroprotection. Summary of the Invention

[0004] To address the aforementioned deficiencies in existing technologies, this invention provides a polypeptide (sequence TNPWSPR) and its applications. This polypeptide can significantly alleviate the core pathological damage in ischemic stroke models and also exhibits broad-spectrum cytoprotective activity in various neurological injury-related models, demonstrating good drug development potential and application value.

[0005] To solve the above-mentioned technical problems, the technical solution provided by the present invention is as follows: In a first aspect, the present invention provides a polypeptide (denoted as TN-PR) with the amino acid sequence: TNPWSPR (SEQ ID NO. 1).

[0006] The polypeptide TN-PR provided by this invention has a simple structure and a rational spatial conformation, enabling it to efficiently penetrate the blood-brain barrier and laying a solid foundation for targeted drug delivery to the central nervous system. At the mechanism of action level, this polypeptide overcomes the limitation of existing polypeptide drugs having only a single function, and can synergistically regulate the complex pathological cascade of ischemic stroke through multiple targets.

[0007] In vitro and in vivo pharmacodynamic studies confirmed the significant biological activity of this peptide. In vivo experiments showed that TN-PR significantly reduced the infarct volume in model mice and decreased the level of serum oxidative stress marker MDA. In vitro experiments showed that this peptide had a significant protective effect against glucose-oxygen deprivation (OGD)-induced damage to mouse hippocampal neurons HT22 cells and human brain microvascular endothelial hCMEC / D3 cells; at the same time, it could effectively resist corticosterone (CORT) and 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion (MPP). + This peptide significantly improved cell survival in PC12 cells induced by CORT. Further mechanistic studies revealed that the peptide exerted an antioxidant effect by inhibiting the excessive accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) induced by CORT in cells.

[0008] The above results demonstrate that the peptide TN-PR can exert neuroprotective effects at multiple pathological stages: on the one hand, it effectively protects the ischemic penumbra by inhibiting oxidative stress and reducing neuronal apoptosis; on the other hand, it has a direct protective effect on human brain microvascular endothelial cells, helping to maintain the integrity of the blood-brain barrier. This multi-target synergistic intervention strategy gives it the potential to improve the neurological prognosis of patients with ischemic stroke compared to single-target therapies, effectively overcoming the technical bottlenecks of existing anti-ischemic drugs and providing a new approach with clinical application value and industrial transformation potential for the treatment of ischemic stroke.

[0009] It should be noted that the polypeptide TN-PR described in this invention was prepared using conventional solid-phase synthesis methods (such as the Fmoc method) in the art. Specifically, Nanjing Genscript Biotech Co., Ltd. was commissioned to perform a custom synthesis using amino acids as raw materials. The purity of the synthesized product was detected by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) > 98.0%, and the molecular weight was verified by mass spectrometry (MS) to be consistent with the theoretical value. After passing quality control, it can be directly used for subsequent in vivo and in vitro pharmacodynamic studies. Those skilled in the art can repeatedly prepare this polypeptide without creative effort by referring to conventional solid-phase polypeptide synthesis processes.

[0010] Secondly, the present invention also provides the use of the above-mentioned polypeptide TN-PR in the preparation of medicaments for the prevention and / or treatment of neurological injury-related diseases.

[0011] In one specific embodiment of the present invention, the nerve injury-related disease is ischemic cerebrovascular disease.

[0012] Furthermore, the ischemic cerebrovascular disease is ischemic stroke. In a more specific embodiment, the ischemic stroke is induced by transient middle cerebral artery occlusion or reperfusion injury.

[0013] In an in vivo pharmacodynamic study of the peptide TN-PR for the treatment of ischemic stroke, the classic mouse tMCAO / R model was used to demonstrate that the peptide can effectively reduce the infarct volume and lower the levels of oxidative stress products in serum and brain tissue, indicating that it has a clear neuroprotective effect at the whole animal level.

[0014] At the in vitro cellular level, this invention constructed various injury models closely related to the pathological processes of ischemic stroke, and systematically verified that the polypeptide possesses broad and multi-mechanistic cellular protective activities: 1. Targeting ischemic-hypoxic core injury: This peptide significantly improved the survival rate of mouse hippocampal HT22 cells treated with 10 hours of oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) and human brain microvascular endothelial hCMEC / D3 cells treated with 6 hours of OGD. This result directly confirms that the peptide possesses both direct neuroprotective and vascular endothelial protective potential, contributing to the simultaneous protection of neural units and the integrity of the blood-brain barrier.

[0015] 2. Targeting neurotoxic stress injury: This peptide is effective against 4 mM MPP. + The induced PC12 cell damage showed significant protective effects and improved cell viability, suggesting that it may exert its effects by antagonizing pathways such as mitochondrial dysfunction or oxidative stress, thus expanding its application prospects in combating neurotoxic damage.

[0016] 3. Targeting Hormonal Stress Injury: This peptide significantly alleviated PC12 cell damage induced by 250 μM corticosterone (CORT). CCK-8 assay results showed that the peptide effectively improved cell viability; furthermore, reactive oxygen species (ROS) fluorescence staining combined with live-cell imaging and ELISA quantitative analysis further confirmed that it significantly reduced CORT-induced excessive accumulation of intracellular ROS. These results clearly suggest that reducing oxidative stress levels is an important molecular mechanism by which this peptide exerts its neuroprotective effect.

[0017] In summary, this invention utilizes an in vivo tMCAO / R model and in vitro studies covering ischemia-hypoxia (OGD) and neurotoxicity (MPP). +Multiple cell models of TNF-PR and hormonal stress (CORT) were used to reveal the application potential of the peptide TN-PR from multiple dimensions and levels. Experiments demonstrated that TN-PR not only has a significant protective effect against the core pathological processes of ischemic stroke, but also exhibits broad-spectrum biological activity against various related injuries. In particular, its clear mechanism of anti-oxidative stress through scavenging reactive oxygen species (ROS) further highlights its multi-target intervention characteristics, providing solid and reliable experimental evidence for its development into a novel, multi-target therapeutic drug for ischemic stroke.

[0018] Thirdly, the present invention provides a polypeptide derivative, which is a fusion polypeptide obtained by attaching a protein purification tag or detection tag that retains polypeptide activity to the amino or carboxyl terminus of the polypeptide TN-PR. Any such fusion polypeptide that retains the therapeutic activity of the polypeptide should be considered an equivalent embodiment of the present invention.

[0019] Specifically, the protein purification tag or detection tag is selected from His tags or FLAG tags.

[0020] On the other hand, the present invention also includes active derivatives obtained by subjecting the sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 1 to one or more conventional chemical modifications. These conventional chemical modifications include, but are not limited to, amination, amidation, acetylation, phosphorylation, glycosylation, or biotinylation. These modifications generally do not alter the biological function of the peptide, but improve its stability, pharmacokinetic properties, or reduce immunogenicity. All of the above derivatives, provided they retain substantially the same neuroprotective activity as the peptide shown in SEQ ID NO: 1, fall within the scope of protection of the present invention.

[0021] Fifthly, the present invention provides the use of the above-mentioned polypeptide derivatives in the preparation of medicaments for the prevention and / or treatment of neurological injury-related diseases.

[0022] In one specific embodiment of the present invention, the nerve injury-related disease is ischemic cerebrovascular disease.

[0023] Furthermore, the ischemic cerebrovascular disease is ischemic stroke.

[0024] In a sixth aspect, the present invention provides a pharmaceutical composition comprising a therapeutically effective amount of the above-described polypeptide TN-PR or a polypeptide derivative thereof, and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.

[0025] The carrier includes, but is not limited to: diluents, disintegrants, binders, lubricants, flow aids, flavoring agents, colorants, preservatives, excipients, surfactants, and other functional excipients required for the preparation of specific dosage forms.

[0026] Furthermore, the dosage form of the pharmaceutical composition is an injection, a lyophilized powder injection, or a nasal spray.

[0027] The pharmaceutical composition provided by this invention can be formulated into various dosage forms, such as injections, lyophilized powder injections, or nasal sprays, etc., and can be prepared according to conventional methods for dosage forms in the art. This invention does not impose any special limitations.

[0028] The pharmaceutical compositions of the polypeptides or their derivatives described in this invention can be administered to subjects via suitable routes of administration known in the art, including but not limited to oral, intravenous, intramuscular, subcutaneous, and mucosal administration.

[0029] The pharmaceutical composition effectively protects nerve cells and cerebral vascular endothelial cells, and resists cell damage induced by a variety of damaging factors. These damaging factors include, but are not limited to: ischemic hypoxia injury (such as glucose-oxygen deprivation), oxidative stress injury (accumulation of reactive oxygen species), and neurotoxins (such as 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion, MPP). + Damage induced by stress hormones (such as corticosterone, CORT).

[0030] In summary, this invention discloses a polypeptide TN-PR as shown in SEQ ID NO.1 and its application in the preparation of drugs for ischemic stroke. Experiments have confirmed that this polypeptide significantly improves neurological deficits, reduces infarct volume, and lowers systemic oxidative stress levels in a mouse transient middle cerebral artery occlusion / reperfusion (tMCAO / R) model in vivo. In vitro, this polypeptide has a direct protective effect against oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD)-induced damage to mouse hippocampal HT22 cells and human brain microvascular endothelial hCMEC / D3 cells, and can resist corticosterone (CORT) and MPP. + The peptide induces PC12 cell damage while effectively inhibiting intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation. The results indicate that this peptide possesses multi-target cytoprotective activity, exerting anti-ischemic stroke effects from multiple dimensions, including reducing infarct volume, inhibiting oxidative stress levels, and protecting neurovascular units. Furthermore, this invention also covers derivatives of the peptide and pharmaceutical compositions, providing complete implementation schemes for their clinical application and demonstrating the potential to develop them into novel, highly effective neuroprotective agents. Attached Figure Description

[0031] To more clearly illustrate the technical solutions in the embodiments of the present invention, the accompanying drawings used in the embodiments will be briefly introduced below. Obviously, the drawings described below are only some embodiments of the present invention. For those skilled in the art, other drawings can be obtained based on these drawings without creative effort.

[0032] Figure 1To illustrate how the peptide TN-PR reduced the cerebral infarction area, behavioral score, and alleviated peripheral oxidative stress in mice with ischemic stroke in the tMCAO / R model in Example 2 of this invention, the following images were used: (A) TTC staining image; (B) percentage of cerebral infarction area; (C) behavioral score of neurological deficit; and (D) serum MDA level in mice. Figure 2 The protective effects of the polypeptide TN-PR in Example 3 of this invention in various cell injury models closely related to the pathological process of ischemic stroke are as follows: (A) Effect on cell survival rate of mouse hippocampal neuronal HT22 cells damaged by 10h glucose-oxygen deprivation (OGD); (B) Effect on cell survival rate of human brain microvascular endothelial hCMEC / D3 cells damaged by 6h glucose-oxygen deprivation (OGD). Figure 3 The protective effect of peptide TN-PR in various cell injury models in Example 4 of this invention: (A) Effect on cell survival of PC12 cells damaged by 250 μM corticosterone (CORT); (B) Effect on cell survival of 4 mM 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion (MPP) + The effect of induced neurotoxicity on cell survival in PC12 cells; Figure 4 The regulatory effect of peptide TN-PR on ROS in damaged neuronal cells in Example 5 of this invention: (A) Representative results of live-cell imaging of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels after PC12 cell injury induced by 250 μM CORT; (B) Absolute quantitative analysis results of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels after PC12 cell injury induced by 250 μM CORT using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) reader. Figure 5 To illustrate the effects of the polypeptide EP-DL in Comparative Example 1 of this invention on the body weight, behavior, percentage of cerebral ischemic infarct volume, serum MDA level, brain inflammatory factor level, and HT22 cells and hCEMEC / D3 cells under protective OGD / R conditions in mice with ischemic stroke, the following were observed: (A) Changes in body weight; (B) Neurological deficit behavioral score; (C) Percentage of cerebral ischemic infarct volume; (D) Serum MDA level; (E) Brain TNF-α level; (F) Brain IL-6 level; (G) Brain IL-1β level; (H) Effect on cell survival rate of mouse hippocampal neuronal HT22 cell damage induced by 10 h of glucose-oxygen deprivation (OGD); (I) Effect on cell survival rate of human brain microvascular hCMEC / D3 endothelial cell damage induced by 6 h of glucose-oxygen deprivation (OGD). Detailed Implementation

[0033] To make the objectives, technical solutions, and advantages of this invention clearer, the invention will be further described in detail below with reference to embodiments. It should be understood that the specific embodiments described herein are merely illustrative and not intended to limit the invention.

[0034] To better illustrate the present invention, further examples are provided below.

[0035] Example 1 This invention provides a polypeptide TN-PR, whose amino acid sequence is: TNPWSPR (SEQ ID NO. 1).

[0036] The methods for obtaining and preparing the above-mentioned polypeptide TN-PR are as follows: 1. Sources of sequence construction The amino acid sequence of the polypeptide TN-PR (SEQ ID NO: 1) was identified from the target protein sample brain protein hydrolysate I (Hebei Zhitong Biopharmaceutical Co., Ltd.) using high-resolution mass spectrometry.

[0037] Mass spectrometry analysis was performed on a Thermo Scientific instrument equipped with a nanoliter spray ionization source. TM OrbitrapFusion TM Lumos TM Tribrid TM The analysis was performed on a mass spectrometer. The raw mass spectrometry data were analyzed using PEAKS® Studio bioinformatics software for database searching and de novo sequencing. Key parameters were set as follows: precursor ion mass tolerance ±10 ppm, fragment ion mass tolerance ±0.02 Da. Through the above analysis, an active polypeptide sequence derived from brain protein hydrolysate was identified with a confidence level higher than 95%. This sequence was named TN-PR, and its amino acid sequence is Thr-Asn-Pro-Trp-Ser-Pro-Arg (single-letter code: TNPWSPR), i.e., the sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 1.

[0038] 2. Chemical Synthesis and Sample Acquisition The polypeptide TN-PR described in this invention is chemically prepared using the standard Fmoc solid-phase polypeptide synthesis method. The L-type amino acid raw materials (T, N, P, W, S, P, R) and other synthetic reagents (such as resins, condensing agents, deprotecting agents, etc.) used in the synthesis are all commercially available analytical grade or pharmaceutical grade (≥99%), and can be purchased from conventional reagent suppliers such as Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd. and Shanghai Aladdin Biochemical Technology Co., Ltd.

[0039] To obtain high-purity samples that meet pharmaceutical research standards, the peptide TN-PR used in this invention was custom-produced by Nanjing Genscript Biotech Co., Ltd., a professional peptide synthesis company, based on the aforementioned Fmoc solid-phase synthesis principle. The production process complies with relevant GMP regulations. The synthesized crude peptide was purified by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC), and the chemical purity was ≥98.0% as determined by analytical RP-HPLC. Mass spectrometry (MS) analysis showed that the measured molecular weight of the peptide was consistent with the theoretical molecular weight, indicating that quality control was qualified.

[0040] Using the above method, the present invention successfully obtained sufficient quantity and high purity of the polypeptide TN-PR, which can be used for subsequent in vivo and in vitro pharmacodynamic studies.

[0041] Example 2 The therapeutic effect of peptide TN-PR on tMCAO / R-induced ischemic stroke in mice Step 1: Experimental Animals, Grouping, and Dosing Regimen Male C57BL / 6J mice aged 6-8 weeks and weighing 20-25g (purchased from Zhejiang Vital River Laboratory Animal Technology Co., Ltd., Animal License No.: SYXK(Su)2021-0011) were selected and acclimatized for one week in a standard SPF environment (temperature 22-25℃, humidity 50%-60%, 12h light / 12h dark cycle, free access to food and water). They were then randomly divided into the following 3 groups using a random number table: i) Sham group: 6 mice, only the neck vessels were separated, no suture embolism was inserted, and no cerebral ischemia-reperfusion treatment was performed. After the mice were housed separately, 0.2 mL of physiological saline was injected intraperitoneally for the first time 1 day before modeling. On the day of modeling and after modeling, intraperitoneal injection was continued once a day until the end of the experiment (72 h after modeling).

[0042] ii) Model group (tMCAO / R same as I / R): 12 mice were used to establish a tMCAO / R (middle cerebral artery occlusion / reperfusion) model (abbreviated as I / R). The drug administration regimen was the same as the sham-operated group, that is, after the mice were housed separately, 0.2 mL of physiological saline was injected intraperitoneally for the first time one day before modeling; intraperitoneal injection was continued once a day on the day of modeling and after modeling until the end of the experiment (72 hours after modeling).

[0043] iii) Peptide treatment group (I / R+TN-PR): 12 mice were used to establish the tMCAO / R model. The peptide TN-PR was prepared fresh and used immediately, with a stock solution concentration of 10 mg / mL (solvent was physiological saline). Before use, it was diluted with physiological saline to 1 mg / mL. After the mice were housed separately, the first administration was started one day before the model was established. The above-mentioned diluted peptide TN-PR solution was injected intraperitoneally daily (the dosage was 10 mg / kg, and the volume of administration was calculated based on the weight of the mouse to ensure accurate dosage). On the day of model establishment and after model establishment, the administration was continued once a day until the end of the experiment (72 hours after model establishment).

[0044] Explanation of the number of experimental animals: During the construction of the tMCAO / R model, some mice died postoperatively due to factors such as surgical trauma, cerebral ischemia-reperfusion stress, and postoperative infection. After screening, the number of valid animals included in the final data statistical analysis was: sham-operated group n=6, model group n=7, and peptide treatment group n=7. All statistical analyses were completed based on valid animal data, and the feeding and handling of experimental animals complied with the requirements of the "Guidelines for Ethical Review of Laboratory Animals" (GB / T 35892-2018).

[0045] Step 2: Establish a mouse model of ischemic stroke induced by middle cerebral artery occlusion / reperfusion (tMCAO / R). A mouse tMCAO / R model was established using the suture occlusion method, with ischemia time strictly controlled to 1 hour. After reperfusion, the mice were fed for 72 hours (3 days). The specific procedures are as follows: i) Anesthesia and Fixation: Mice were placed in an anesthesia induction box and anesthesia was induced using a gas mixture containing 3%–4% isoflurane (oxygen flow rate: 0.8–1.0 L / min). After the mice lost their righting reflex (a marker of adequate anesthesia depth), they were moved to the operating table, and anesthesia was maintained by continuously administering a gas mixture containing 1.5%–2.0% isoflurane through a nasal cone. The mice were fixed in a supine position on the operating table, and their core body temperature was monitored and maintained at 37.0 ± 0.5 °C in real time using a rectal temperature probe combined with a feedback heating pad (body temperature stability is a key prerequisite for the successful construction of the tMCAO / R model, and can avoid the impact of body temperature fluctuations on experimental results).

[0046] ii) Neck incision and blood vessel separation: After preparing the anterior neck area, disinfect the area three times with 75% medical alcohol (with a 30-second interval between each disinfection). Make a longitudinal incision in the midline of the neck (approximately 1.5-2.0 cm in length). Under a surgical microscope (10-20x magnification), bluntly dissect the subcutaneous connective tissue, salivary glands, and sternocleidomastoid muscle of the neck to fully expose the left common carotid artery, external carotid artery, and internal carotid artery. The dissection process should be gentle to avoid damaging the blood vessel walls and surrounding nerves and to prevent bleeding from affecting the stability of the model.

[0047] iii) Vascular pretreatment: Carefully dissect the external carotid artery with micro-forceps to avoid traction on the blood vessel and causing vasospasm, and permanently ligate its distal end with 5-0 medical silk suture; temporarily clamp the proximal end of the common carotid artery with a miniature arterial clamp to block blood flow, providing conditions for subsequent suture insertion and avoiding blood flow interference.

[0048] iv) Insertion of the suture and ischemia: Approximately 2 mm proximal to the ligation point of the external carotid artery, make a small 45° oblique incision using microvascular scissors (the incision size should be just large enough to allow for smooth insertion of the suture without significant bleeding). Gently insert a nylon suture (0.22 mm in diameter, approximately 18-20 mm in length, with a silicone coating thickness of 0.02-0.03 mm) with its tip coated with silicone into the internal carotid artery through this incision. Slowly advance the suture along the internal carotid artery into the cranial cavity to a depth of approximately 9-11 mm (adjust slightly according to the mouse's weight: 9-10 mm for mice weighing 20-22 g, and 10-11 mm for mice weighing 23-25 ​​g), until slight resistance is felt, indicating that the tip of the suture has reached and blocked the origin of the middle cerebral artery. Gently ligate the stump of the external carotid artery with another 5-0 medical suture to fix the suture and prevent displacement. Immediately begin recording the ischemia time, which should be strictly controlled to 1 hour (with an error not exceeding ±5 minutes).

[0049] v) Reperfusion: After 1 hour of ischemia, gently clamp the suture thrombus at the stump of the external carotid artery with micro-forceps, and slowly pull out the nylon suture thrombus into the stump of the external carotid artery (the pulling speed should be controlled at 1~2 mm / s to avoid excessive traction and damage to the internal carotid artery wall). Visually observe the recovery of blood flow in the internal carotid artery (criteria for judging the recovery of blood flow: the vessel is full and continuous blood flow pulsation is visible). After confirming the recovery of blood flow, reperfusion is performed. Then, slowly release the micro-arterial clamp on the common carotid artery to restore normal blood flow in the neck vessels and avoid blood flow impact that could cause vascular damage.

[0050] vi) Wound Closure and Postoperative Recovery: After carefully checking the surgical area for active bleeding, suture the neck muscles and skin incision layer by layer with 4-0 medical sutures. After suturing, disinfect the incision again with 75% medical alcohol to prevent postoperative infection. Turn off the isoflurane supply and maintain a continuous oxygen supply (oxygen flow rate adjusted to 0.5~0.8L / min). Transfer the mice to a preheated recovery cage (the recovery cage temperature is maintained at 30~32℃ to simulate the normal body temperature environment of mice and promote recovery). Closely observe the mice's respiration and activity until they are fully recovered. Keep the mice in individual cages after surgery. Within 24 hours, administer a subcutaneous injection of 0.5mL of preheated saline solution at 37℃ to replenish body fluids and reduce postoperative mortality. Continuously monitor the mice's mental state, food and water intake, activity, and other vital signs, and promptly remove any mice with abnormal conditions.

[0051] Step 3: Assessment of infarct volume and neurological deficits in mice with ischemic stroke i) Infarct volume determination (TTC staining method): 72 h after reperfusion, mice were deeply anesthetized with an excess of isoflurane (5%). After the mice stopped breathing, they were rapidly perfused with 4°C pre-cooled physiological saline (perfusion rate 5 mL / min) through the heart until the liver turned pale white. The brain was then quickly harvested (within 5 min). The intact brain tissue was flash-frozen at -20°C for approximately 15 min to facilitate subsequent sectioning. Using a brain sectioning mold, the brain tissue was continuously cut along the coronal plane into slices approximately 1 mm thick. The slices were immersed in 2% 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC) solution and incubated at 37°C in the dark for 15–20 min, gently shaking the incubation container every 5 min to ensure uniform staining. After staining, normal brain tissue appeared brick red, while the infarcted area appeared pale white. Brain slice images were acquired using a digital camera under the same lighting conditions. The infarct area of ​​each brain slice was analyzed using ImageJ software, and then the percentage of total brain infarct volume was calculated (percentage of infarct volume = volume of infarcted area / total brain volume × 100%).

[0052] ii) Neurological deficit behavioral assessment: Neurological behavioral assessment was conducted at 24h, 48h, and 72h post-reperfusion using the Longa and Bederson scoring methods. Higher scores indicated more severe neurological deficits in the mice. The assessments were performed blinded by two trained researchers (to avoid subjective bias). Specific scoring criteria are as follows: 0 points: No neurological deficits, normal activity and eating; 1 point: When placed on a table, the paralyzed side's forepaw cannot be fully extended. When the tail is lifted, the paralyzed side's forepaw retracts and tucks under the abdomen. 2 points: When walking, the person turns in circles towards the paralyzed side, and the resistance to pushing objects towards the paralyzed side is significantly lower than that on the normal side; 3 points: When walking, the person leans to the paralyzed side and is unable to maintain a normal standing posture; 4 points: Unable to walk automatically, exhibiting loss of consciousness, and showing no obvious response to external stimuli.

[0053] Step 4: Assessment of the effect of peptide TN-PR on oxidative stress levels: Serum MDA detection: 72 h after reperfusion and before mouse tissue collection, blood was collected via the orbital venous plexus (0.3–0.5 mL per mouse). Whole blood was collected in anticoagulant-free centrifuge tubes, incubated at room temperature for 30 min, and then centrifuged at 8000 rpm for 5 min at 4 °C. The supernatant serum was separated and stored at -80 °C for later use. The MDA kit (purchased from Solarbio Science & Technology Co., Ltd., catalog number: BC0025-100T / 96S) was strictly followed to detect the malondialdehyde (MDA) content in the serum. Each sample was tested in triplicate, and the average value was used as the final result.

[0054] After the experiment, statistical analysis was performed on the infarct volume, neurological deficit score, and serum MDA level data using SPSS statistical software. Data are expressed as mean ± standard deviation. "±s" indicates that one-way ANOVA combined with LSD post-hoc test was used, and P<0.05 was considered statistically significant, thus clarifying the therapeutic effect of peptide TN-PR on tMCAO / R model mice.

[0055] The results are as follows Figure 1 As shown in Tables 1 to 3.

[0056] Table 1. Effect of peptide TN-PR on the percentage of cerebral ischemic infarct volume in I / R mice.

[0057] Table 2. Effects of peptide TN-PR on neurological deficit scores in mice 3 days after modeling.

[0058] Table 3. Effects of peptide TN-PR on serum MDA levels in I / R mice

[0059] Experimental results showed that the peptide TN-PR could reduce the infarct area in mice with ischemic stroke. Figure 1 A, Figure 1 .B) Improved behavioral scores in mice with ischemic stroke ( Figure 1 .C), while the peptide TN-PR can also reduce serum MDA levels ( Figure 1 (D). This indicates that the peptide TN-PR can protect against neurological damage in mice with ischemic stroke and improve oxidative stress levels, thereby enhancing antioxidant capacity.

[0060] Example 3 Protective effect of peptide TN-PR against oxygen deprivation (OGD)-induced damage to HT22 neurons and hCMEC / D3 endothelial cells. Experimental materials: HT22 mouse hippocampal neurons and hCMEC / D3 human brain microvascular endothelial cells were purchased from Wuhan Pronosei Biotechnology Co., Ltd. (cell line numbers: HT22:CVCL_0321 and hCMEC / D3:CVCL_U985, respectively); high-glucose DMEM (catalog number: 11965084) and glucose-free DMEM (catalog number: 11966025) culture media were purchased from Gibco; fetal bovine serum (FBS) was purchased from Suzhou Ecosei Biotechnology Co., Ltd. (catalog number: FSP500); CCK-8 reagent was purchased from Shanghai Beyotime Biotechnology Co., Ltd. (catalog number: C0039).

[0061] Step 1: Protective effect of peptide TN-PR against OGD-induced damage to mouse hippocampal neurons HT22 cells. 1. Cell seeding and grouping HT22 cells in logarithmic growth phase were digested with 0.25% trypsin, resuspended in DMEM high-glucose medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin) with 10% fetal bovine serum, and then seeded at 1.2 × 10⁶ cells per well. 4 Cells were seeded at a density of 100 μL per well in 96-well plates. The plates were incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2 for 12 h. When cell confluence reached 70%–80%, the cells were randomly divided into three groups, with four biological replicates per group. A blank control well (containing only culture medium, without cells, used to subtract background absorbance) was also included. Control group: The original culture medium was discarded and replaced with serum-free high-glucose DMEM medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin), and cultured under normal culture conditions (37℃, 5% CO2, saturated humidity) for 10 h. OGD model group: Discard the original culture medium and replace it with serum-free and glucose-free DMEM culture medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin). Transfer the culture plate to a three-gas incubator (94% N2, 5% CO2, 1% O2) and incubate at 37℃ and saturated humidity for 10 h to establish a glucose-oxygen deprivation cell damage model. The peptide therapy group (TN-PR group) was as follows: The original culture medium was discarded and replaced with serum-free and sugar-free DMEM culture medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin) containing different final concentrations of peptide TN-PR (0.1 μg / mL, 0.5 μg / mL, and 1.5 μg / mL). The culture was placed under the same OGD conditions as described above and cultured for 10 h. The peptide TN-PR was prepared fresh and used immediately. The stock solution concentration was 10 mg / mL (solvent was serum-free and sugar-free DMEM culture medium). Before use, it was diluted with serum-free and sugar-free DMEM culture medium to the corresponding final concentration to ensure accurate concentration.

[0062] 2. Cell viability assay After OGD treatment, carefully discard the culture medium from each well. Add 10 μL of CCK-8 reagent and 90 μL of serum-free high-glucose DMEM medium (without penicillin or streptomycin to avoid interfering with the detection results) to each well. Gently shake the culture plate for 1–2 min to mix thoroughly (shaking speed 50 rpm). Place the culture plate back in a 37°C, 5% CO2, saturated humidity incubator and incubate in the dark for 0.5–1 h (incubation time determined based on preliminary experimental optimization). Use a microplate reader (Thermo Scientific Multiskan FC) to measure the absorbance (OD) of each well at 450 nm. 450 Before measurement, let the culture plate stand for 10 minutes to ensure the liquid in the wells is uniform, and the absorbance value of the blank control wells should be <0.1. Using the control group cell viability as 100%, calculate the relative cell viability of each group using the following formula: Relative cell survival rate (%) = (Experimental group OD) 450 - Blank control hole OD 450 ) / (control group OD 450 - Blank control hole OD 450 (mean × 100%) Step 2: Protective effect of peptide TN-PR against OGD-induced hCMEC / D3 human brain microvascular endothelial cell injury. 1. Cell seeding and grouping Logarithmically growing hCMEC / D3 human brain microvascular endothelial cells were digested with 0.25% trypsin, resuspended in DMEM high-glucose medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin) with 10% fetal bovine serum, and then seeded at 8 × 10⁻⁶ cells per well. 3 Cells were seeded at a density of 100 μL per well in 96-well plates. The plates were incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2 for 12 hours. When cell adhesion and confluence reached 60%–70%, the cells were randomly divided into three groups, with four biological replicates in each group. A blank control well (containing only DMEM high-glucose medium, without cells, used to subtract background absorbance) was also included. Control group: The original culture medium was discarded and replaced with serum-free DMEM high glucose medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin), and cultured under normal culture conditions (37℃, 5% CO2, saturated humidity) for 6 h; OGD model group: Discard the original culture medium and replace it with serum-free and glucose-free DMEM culture medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin). Transfer the culture plate to a three-gas incubator (94% N2, 5% CO2, 1% O2) and incubate at 37℃ and saturated humidity for 6 h to establish a glucose-oxygen deprivation cell damage model. The peptide therapy group (TN-PR group): The original culture medium was discarded and replaced with serum-free and sugar-free DMEM culture medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin) containing different final concentrations of peptide TN-PR (0.1 μg / mL, 0.5 μg / mL, 1.5 μg / mL). The culture was placed under the above OGD conditions for 6 h. Peptide TN-PR was prepared and used immediately. The stock solution concentration was 10 mg / mL (solvent was serum-free and sugar-free DMEM culture medium). Before use, it was diluted with serum-free and sugar-free DMEM culture medium to the corresponding final concentration to ensure accurate concentration.

[0063] 2. Cell viability assay After OGD treatment for 6 hours, CCK-8 assay was performed according to the method in step 1.2 to determine OD. 450 The values ​​were then calculated to determine the relative cell viability.

[0064] 3. Explanation of the scientific validity of the experimental design The replication settings were based on the following criteria: both the HT22 cell experiment and the hCMEC / D3 cell experiment used 4 biological replicates to meet the requirements of statistical analysis, which can effectively reduce experimental errors and ensure the reliability and reproducibility of experimental results.

[0065] Data statistics principles: Experimental data are expressed as mean ± standard deviation. "±s") indicates that SPSS statistical software was used, and one-way ANOVA combined with LSD post-hoc test was used for inter-group comparisons. P<0.05 was considered statistically significant.

[0066] The results are as follows Figure 2 As shown in Tables 4 and 5.

[0067] Table 4. Effect of peptide TN-PR on the survival rate of HT22 cells damaged by OGD for 10 h.

[0068] Table 5. Effect of peptide TN-PR on the survival rate of hCMEC / D3 cells damaged by OGD 6h.

[0069] The above experimental results show that, compared with the control group, the survival rates of HT22 cells and hCMEC / D3 cells in the OGD model group were significantly decreased (P<0.0001). This demonstrates that TN-PR peptide treatment can increase the survival rate of both cell types after OGD injury in a concentration-dependent manner (P<0.01 or P<0.001). Figure 2 A、 Figure 2 (B), demonstrating that it has a direct protective effect on neurons and cerebral vascular endothelial cells.

[0070] Example 4: Protective effect of peptide TN-PR against chemically induced PC12 cell damage. Experimental materials: PC12 rat adrenal medullary pheochromocytoma cells were purchased from the Cell Bank of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (cell line number: CSTR:19375.09.3101RATSCSP517); high-glucose DMEM (catalog number: 11965084) and glucose-free DMEM (catalog number: 11966025) culture media were purchased from Gibco; fetal bovine serum (FBS, catalog number: FSP500) was purchased from Suzhou Ekosei Biotechnology Co., Ltd.; corticosterone (CORT, purity ≥98%, catalog number: C119329) and 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion (MPP) were also used. + The reagent (purity ≥99%, catalog number: N137206) was purchased from Shanghai Aladdin Biochemical Technology Co., Ltd.; the CCK-8 reagent was purchased from Shanghai Beyotime Biotechnology Co., Ltd.; all reagents were sterile and met the standards for cell experiments.

[0071] Step 1: Protective effect of peptide TN-PR against corticosterone (CORT)-induced PC12 cell damage. 1. Cell seeding and grouping PC12 cells in logarithmic growth phase were digested with 0.25% trypsin and then resuspended in high-glucose DMEM medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin) to adjust the cell density to 1.0 × 10⁶ cells / mL. 4 Cells were seeded per well in a 96-well plate, with a final volume of 100 μL per well. The plates were incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2 for 12 h. When cell adhesion and confluence reached 70%–80%, the cells were randomly divided into four groups, with four biological replicates (n=4) in each group. A blank control well (containing only serum-free, high-glucose DMEM medium, without cells, used to subtract background absorbance) was also included. Control group: The original culture medium was discarded and replaced with fresh serum-free high-glucose DMEM culture medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin), without the addition of any damaging agents or peptides; Corticosterone model group (CORT group): The original culture medium was discarded and replaced with serum-free high-glucose DMEM culture medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin) with a final concentration of 250 μM corticosterone (CORT) to establish a PC12 cell chemical damage model. The peptide therapy group (TN-PR group): The original culture medium was discarded and replaced with serum-free high-glucose DMEM culture medium (containing 100U / mL penicillin and 100μg / mL streptomycin) containing a final concentration of 250μM CORT and different concentrations of peptide TN-PR (0.5μg / mL, 2μg / mL, 10μg / mL). Peptide TN-PR was prepared and used immediately, with a stock solution concentration of 10mg / mL (solvent being serum-free high-glucose DMEM culture medium). Before use, it was diluted with serum-free high-glucose DMEM culture medium to the corresponding final concentration to ensure accurate concentration.

[0072] 2. Cell viability assay After incubating each group of cells at 37°C and 5% CO2 for 24 hours, cell viability was detected using the CCK-8 assay as described in step one of Example 3. The specific procedure was as follows: Carefully discard the culture medium from each well. Add 10 μL of CCK-8 reagent and 90 μL of serum-free, high-glucose DMEM culture medium (without penicillin or streptomycin to avoid interference with the results) to each well. Gently shake the culture plate for 1-2 minutes to mix (shaking speed 50 rpm). Return the culture plate to a 37°C, 5% CO2, saturated humidity incubator and incubate in the dark for 0.5-1 hour (incubation time determined based on preliminary experiments). Measure the absorbance (OD) at 450 nm using a microplate reader (Thermo Scientific Multiskan FC). 450 Before measurement, let the culture plate stand for 10 minutes to ensure the liquid in the wells is uniform, and the absorbance value of the blank control wells should be <0.1; with the cell viability of the control group as 100%, calculate the relative cell viability of each group according to the following formula: Relative cell survival rate (%) = (Experimental group OD) 450 - Blank control hole OD 450 ) / (control group OD 450 - Blank control hole OD 450 (mean × 100%) Step 2: Peptide TN-PR against MPP + Protective effect against induced neurotoxicity damage in PC12 cells 1. Cell seeding and grouping PC12 cells in logarithmic growth phase were digested with 0.25% trypsin and resuspended in high-glucose DMEM medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin) with 10% fetal bovine serum. The cell density was adjusted to 8 × 10³ cells / well, and the cells were seeded into 96-well plates with a final volume of 100 μL per well. The cells were incubated at 37°C and 5% CO2 for 24 h. When the cell confluence reached 70%–80%, the cells were randomly divided into four groups, with four biological replicates (n=4) in each group. A blank control well was also included (containing only serum-free high-glucose DMEM medium, without cells, to subtract background absorbance). Control group: The original culture medium was discarded and replaced with fresh serum-free high-glucose DMEM culture medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin), without the addition of any damaging agents or peptides; MPP + Model Group (MPP) + Group 1): Discard the original culture medium and replace it with a medium containing 4 mM 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ions (MPP). + The PC12 cell neurotoxicity injury model was established by using serum-free, high-glucose DMEM medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin) and avoiding light throughout the above process. The peptide treatment group (TN-PR group) was replaced with a culture medium containing a final concentration of 4 mM MPP. + Serum-free high-glucose DMEM medium (containing 100 U / mL penicillin and 100 μg / mL streptomycin) with different concentrations of peptide TN-PR (0.2 μg / mL, 0.5 μg / mL, 2.5 μg / mL) was prepared and used immediately. The stock solution concentration was 10 mg / mL (solvent was serum-free high-glucose DMEM medium). Before use, it was diluted with serum-free high-glucose DMEM medium to the corresponding final concentration to ensure accurate concentration. All the above processes were carried out in the dark.

[0073] 2. Cell viability assay After incubating each group of cells at 37°C and 5% CO2 for 24 hours, cell viability was detected using the CCK-8 assay as described in step one of Example 3, and OD was measured. 450 The relative cell viability was calculated, and the procedure was consistent with step one to ensure experimental reproducibility.

[0074] 3. Explanation of the scientific validity of the experimental design The replication factor is based on the following: In this embodiment, each group of PC12 cells is configured with 4 biological replicates (n=4). PC12 cells are neuroendocrine cells, which are resistant to chemical damage (CORT, MPP).+ The sensitivity of the sample is high, and four biological replicates can effectively reduce random errors in the experiment and further ensure the accuracy of the experimental results.

[0075] Concentration gradient design basis: for two different damage models (CORT and MPP) + ), and appropriate peptide TN-PR concentration gradients were set. The CORT model used a wide range of gradients of 0.5 μg / mL, 2 μg / mL, and 10 μg / mL to cover low, medium, and high concentrations for preliminary assessment of the protective effect; MPP + The model uses relatively low concentration gradients of 0.2 μg / mL, 0.5 μg / mL, and 2.5 μg / mL to explore the effective dose range more precisely, avoid the potential toxicity of high-concentration peptides to cells, and thus accurately determine the optimal concentration range for TN-PR to exert its neuroprotective effect.

[0076] Data statistics principles: Experimental data are expressed as mean ± standard deviation. "±s") indicates that SPSS statistical software was used, and one-way ANOVA combined with LSD post-hoc test was used for inter-group comparisons. P<0.05 was considered statistically significant.

[0077] result Figure 3 As shown in Tables 6 and 7.

[0078] Table 6. Effect of peptide TN-PR on the survival rate of PC12 cells damaged by 250 μM CORT.

[0079] Table 7. Effects of peptide TN-PR on 4mM MPP + Effect of damage on PC12 cell survival

[0080] Experimental results show that treatment with 250 μM CORT for 24 h or 4 mM MPP... + Treatment for 24 hours significantly reduced PC12 cell viability (P<0.0001). Co-treatment with the peptide TN-PR significantly antagonized CORT and MPP. + The decrease in cell viability was caused in a concentration-dependent manner (P<0.05 or P<0.001). Figure 3 A, Figure 3 (B), suggesting that this polypeptide has a protective effect against both hormone stress injury and neurotoxic injury.

[0081] Example 5: Effect of peptide TN-PR on CORT-induced intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels in PC12 cells Experimental materials: PC12 rat adrenal medullary pheochromocytoma cells were purchased from the Cell Bank of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (cell line number: CSTR:19375.09.3101RATSCSP517); high-glucose DMEM (catalog number: 11965084) and glucose-free DMEM (catalog number: 11966025) culture media were purchased from Gibco; fetal bovine serum (FBS, catalog number: FSP500) was purchased from Suzhou Ekosei Biotechnology Co., Ltd.; corticosterone (CORT, purity ≥98%, catalog number: C119329) and 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion (MPP) were also used. + The reagent (purity ≥99%, catalog number: N137206) was purchased from Shanghai Aladdin Biochemical Technology Co., Ltd.; the CCK-8 reagent was purchased from Shanghai Beyotime Biotechnology Co., Ltd.; all reagents were sterile and met the standards for cell experiments.

[0082] The reactive oxygen species (ROS) detection kit (DCFH-DA fluorescent probe method) was purchased from Beyotime Biotechnology Co., Ltd.; the live cell imaging system was purchased from Agilent Technologies (product number: Lionheart FX). Both the live cell imaging system and the BioTek Synergy HTX multi-functional microplate reader were calibrated to ensure accurate and reliable detection data.

[0083] Experimental steps i) Cell treatment PC12 cells were seeded in 24-well culture plates. The seeding density, culture conditions, and grouping scheme were performed according to the method described in step one of Example 4. The cell seeding density was adjusted to 1.0 × 10⁶ cells / well. 4 Each well contains 500 μL of samples and is randomly divided into 3 groups, with 3 biological replicates (n=3) in each group: control group, 250 μM CORT model group, and CORT+TN-PR peptide group (the final peptide concentration was selected as 10 μg / mL, which showed the best protective effect in Example 4, to ensure the relevance and continuity of the experiment). Each group strictly followed the corresponding protocol to complete the drug treatment and the culture conditions were kept consistent.

[0084] ii) ROS detection After 24 hours of CORT treatment, carefully discard the culture medium from each well (avoiding scratching of adherent cells to prevent affecting fluorescence detection results). Strictly follow the ROS detection kit instructions: Use serum-free, high-glucose DMEM medium pre-warmed to 37°C to dilute the DCFH-DA fluorescent probe at a ratio of 1:1000 to prepare the probe working solution. Add 500 μL of the diluted working solution to each well, ensuring complete coverage of the cells. Incubate the 24-well plate in a 37°C, 5% CO2 incubator in the dark for 30 minutes, avoiding shaking the plate during incubation to prevent cell detachment. After incubation, gently wash the cells three times with pre-warmed serum-free, high-glucose DMEM medium, allowing them to stand for 2 minutes after each wash to thoroughly remove any undeclared free probes and eliminate background interference.

[0085] iii) Imaging and Quantitative Analysis ① Live cell imaging: After washing the cells, the culture plate is immediately placed under the live cell imaging system. Three cells are evenly distributed in each well and the field of view is selected for imaging to obtain fluorescence images. The intracellular ROS level is qualitatively assessed by fluorescence intensity (the higher the fluorescence intensity, the more ROS is generated).

[0086] ② Absolute quantification using an ELISA reader: After imaging observation, a multi-functional ELISA reader is used to detect the fluorescence intensity value of each well under the conditions of excitation wavelength 488nm and emission wavelength 525nm. The fluorescence intensity value reflects the relative content of ROS in the cell, and the absolute quantitative analysis is completed.

[0087] After the test, the fluorescence intensity data of each group were statistically analyzed using SPSS statistical software. Data are expressed as mean ± standard deviation. "±s" indicates that one-way ANOVA combined with LSD post-hoc test was used, and P<0.05 was considered statistically significant, clarifying the regulatory role of peptide TN-PR on CORT-induced intracellular ROS levels in PC12 cells.

[0088] The results are as follows Figure 4 As shown in Table 8.

[0089] Table 8. Effects of peptide TN-PR on CORT-induced ROS levels in PC12 cells

[0090] Live-cell imaging showed that the green fluorescence intensity in PC12 cells of the CORT model group was significantly stronger than that of the control group, indicating a large accumulation of ROS; while compared with the CORT model group, the fluorescence intensity in cells of the peptide co-treatment group was significantly weakened. Microplate reader quantification results were consistent with the imaging results: compared with the control group, the ROS level in the CORT model group was significantly increased (P<0.0001); while compared with the CORT model group, the peptide TN-PR significantly reduced the ROS level (P<0.001). Figure 4 A, Figure 4 (B). This result confirms that the peptide TN-PR can effectively alleviate CORT-induced oxidative stress in PC12 cells.

[0091] Comparative Example 1 Design and synthesis of control peptide EP-DL: To verify the specific efficacy of the polypeptide TN-PR (SEQ ID NO: 1) of this invention in treating ischemic stroke and to eliminate non-specific interference that may be caused by arbitrary amino acid sequences, this invention designed and prepared a control peptide with no significant pharmacological activity, named EP-DL. The amino acid sequence of this control peptide is Glu-Pro-Pro-Thr-Val-Val-Pro-Gly-Gly-Asp-Leu (single-letter code: EPPTVVPGGDL), which is the sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 2.

[0092] To ensure the accuracy and reliability of the comparative experiment, the control peptide EP-DL was prepared using the same method and quality control standards as the peptide TN-PR of this invention.

[0093] Specifically, the control peptide EP-DL was chemically prepared using the Fmoc solid-phase peptide synthesis method, which is well-known in the art. The L-type amino acid raw materials (E, P, T, V, G, D, L) and other reagents used in the synthesis were all commercially available analytical grade or pharmaceutical grade (≥99%), and could be purchased from conventional reagent suppliers such as Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd. and Shanghai Aladdin Biochemical Technology Co., Ltd.

[0094] The control peptide EP-DL used in this comparative example was custom-produced by Nanjing Genscript Biotech Co., Ltd., a professional peptide synthesis company, based on the aforementioned Fmoc solid-phase synthesis principle. The production process complied with relevant GMP requirements. The synthesized crude peptide was purified by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC), and the final product was identified using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS). The results showed that the measured molecular weight was consistent with the theoretical value; analytical RP-HPLC analysis showed that its chemical purity was ≥98%.

[0095] The control peptide EP-DL was subjected to behavioral, infarct area, brain inflammatory factor levels, and protective OGD-induced HT22 cell and hCMEC / D3 assays using the same methods as the peptide TN-PR. The results are as follows: Figure 5 As shown in Tables 9 to 17.

[0096] Table 9. Effects of EP-DL peptides on body weight in I / R mice.

[0097] Table 10 Effects of EP-DL peptides on neurological deficit scores in I / R mice

[0098] Table 11 Effects of EP-DL peptide on cerebral infarction volume in I / R mice

[0099] Table 12 Effect of control peptide EP-DL on serum MDA levels in I / R mice

[0100] Table 13 Effects of EP-DL peptides on TNF-α levels in the cerebral cortex of I / R mice

[0101] Table 14 Effects of EP-DL peptides on IL-6 levels in the cerebral cortex of I / R mice

[0102] Table 15 Effects of EP-DL peptides on IL-1β levels in the cerebral cortex of I / R mice

[0103] Table 16 Effect of EP-DL peptide on the survival rate of HT22 cells damaged by OGD for 10 h

[0104] Table 17 Effect of EP-DL peptide on the survival rate of hCMEC / D3 cells damaged by OGD 6h

[0105] Experimental results showed that there were no significant differences in body weight, cerebral infarction volume, and neurological deficit scores between the EP-DL control group and the model group (P>0.05). Specifically, the body weight continued to decrease, consistent with the trend of body weight change in the model group. Figure 5 .A); No significant decrease in behavioral scores for neurological deficits ( Figure 5.B); The volume of the cerebral infarction did not decrease significantly ( Figure 5 .C); Serum MDA levels did not decrease significantly ( Figure 5 .D).

[0106] The levels of inflammatory factors in the cerebral cortex of mice in the EP-DL control group were not significantly different from those in the model group (P>0.05). Specifically, the levels of inflammatory factors TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-1β showed a significantly increased trend consistent with those in the model group. Figure 5 .E, Figure 5 .F, Figure 5 .G). The cell viability of the EP-DL peptide-treated group was not significantly improved compared to the OGD group. Figure 5 .H and Figure 5 The results indicate that EP-DL peptides have no significant therapeutic effect on ischemic stroke, further confirming that the significant therapeutic effect of TN-PR peptides is specific and not a non-specific effect of random peptides.

[0107] The above description is only a preferred embodiment of the present invention and is not intended to limit the present invention. Any modifications, equivalent substitutions or improvements made within the spirit and principles of the present invention should be included within the protection scope of the present invention.

Claims

1. A polypeptide, characterized in that, Its amino acid sequence is shown in SEQ ID NO:

1.

2. The polypeptide according to claim 1, characterized in that, The polypeptide was prepared by solid-phase synthesis using amino acid raw materials, and its purity was >98.0% as determined by HPLC-MS.

3. A polypeptide derivative, characterized in that, The polypeptide derivative is a fusion polypeptide obtained by attaching a protein purification tag or detection tag that can retain polypeptide activity to the amino or carboxyl terminus of the polypeptide described in claim 1.

4. The polypeptide derivative according to claim 3, characterized in that, The protein purification tag or detection tag is a His tag or a FLAG tag.

5. The use of the polypeptide of claim 1 or the polypeptide derivative of claim 3 in the preparation of a medicament for the prevention and / or treatment of neurological injury-related diseases.

6. The application according to claim 5, characterized in that, The neurological injury-related disease is ischemic cerebrovascular disease.

7. The application according to claim 6, characterized in that, The ischemic cerebrovascular disease mentioned is ischemic stroke.

8. A pharmaceutical composition, characterized in that, The product comprises a therapeutically effective amount of the polypeptide of claim 1 or the polypeptide derivative of claim 3, and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.