4.6 Article

Molecular Design of a Minimal Peptide Nanoparticle

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 3, Issue 5, Pages 724-732

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.6b00243

Keywords

peptide nanoparticle; protein design; drug delivery; molecular dynamics simulation; self-assembly

Funding

  1. NIH/NIDA [1DP1DA033524]
  2. NIH/NIGMS [1P0IGM096971]

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Nanoparticles are getting a great deal of attention in the rapidly developing field of nanomedicine. For example they can be used as drug delivery systems, for imaging applications, or as carriers for synthetic vaccines. Protein-based nanoparticles offer the advantage of biocompatibility and biodegradability thus avoiding some of the major toxicity concerns with nanoparticle associated approaches. Our group has developed self-assembling peptide/protein nanopartices (SAPNs) that are built up from two coiled-coil oligomerization domains joined by a linker region and used them to design subunit vaccines. For drug delivery approaches the SAPNs need to be as small as possible to avoid strong immune responses that could possibly even lead to anaphylaxis. Here we used a computational and biophysical approach to minimize the size of the SAPNs for their use as drug delivery system. We tested different charge distributions on the pentameric dynamicssimulations to down-select an optimal design. This design was then investigated in vitro by biophysical methods and we were able to engineer a minimal SAPN of only 11 nm in diameter. Such minimal-sized SAPNs offer new avenues for a safer development as drug delivery systems or other biomedical applications.

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