4.7 Article

Interaction between Cell-Penetrating Peptides and Acid-Sensitive Anionic Oligopeptides as a Model for the Design of Targeted Drug Carriers

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages 1583-1590

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/mp400747k

Keywords

cell-penetrating peptide; arginine-rich peptide; pH sensitive delivery; circular dichroism

Funding

  1. NIH National Cancer Institute [R21 CA169841]
  2. University of Southern California (USC) Ming Hsieh Institute for Research of Engineering-Medicine for Cancer
  3. China Scholarship Council (CSC)

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Overcoming the nonspecific cellular uptake of cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) is a major hurdle in their clinical application. Using pH as the activation switch, histidine-glutamic acid (HE) dipeptide repeats were fused to CPPs to trigger the membrane-penetrating activity at mildly acidic pH environments (i.e., pH 6.5 or below) while masking the internalization at neutral pH (i.e., pH 7.0 or above). In this study, a series of recombinant GST-fusion proteins containing an HE oligopeptide sequence (i.e., (HE)(n) with n = 8, 10, or 12) and a cationic CPP (i.e., YG(RG)(6), YGR(6)G(6), or Tat) were engineered for a pH-sensitive study comparing their cellular uptake and surface binding in cultured HeLa cells. Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy was performed to correlate differences between CPPs in secondary structure with the pH sensitivity. YGR(6)G(6) with clustered arginine residues exhibited greater pH sensitivity in cellular uptake than YG(RG)(6) with separated arginine residues. Increasing the stretch of HE repeats decreased cellular uptake and surface binding for both YG(RG)(6) and YGR(6)G(6). The ratio of cellular internalization at pH 7.5 vs 6.0 was not changed by the presence of serum. CD spectral data revealed that both (HE)(10)-Tat and (HE)(10)-YGR(6)G(6) exhibited an unordered secondary structure, whereas (HE)(10)-YG(RG)(6) adopted an antiparallel beta-sheet conformation. This beta-sheet conformation presumably stabilized the association of (HE)(10) with YG(RG)(6), leading to weakened pH sensitivity of (HE)(10)-YG(RG)(6). On the other hand, the random-coiled structures, that is, (HE)(10)-YGR(6)G(6) and (HE)(10)-Tat, both showed higher pH sensitivity as determined in cell experiments. The data presented in this study provide a basis for the future design of pH-sensitive HE-CPP carrier for targeted drug delivery.

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