4.8 Article

Rational design of thioamide peptides as selective inhibitors of cysteine protease cathepsin L

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue 32, Pages 10825-10835

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1sc00785h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Pennsylvania
  2. National Science Foundation [NSF CHE-1708759]
  3. NIH through the Chemistry Biology Interface Training Program [T32 GM071339]
  4. NSF [DGE-1845298]

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This study demonstrates that specific peptidyl protease inhibitors can be designed by strategically placing a thioamide, improving the stability and selectivity of the peptides against cathepsin family cysteine proteases. One peptide, R-1A(S), stabilized with thioamide, showed inhibition of all five cathepsins while displaying over 25-fold specificity for Cts L against the other cathepsins.
Aberrant levels of cathepsin L (Cts L), a ubiquitously expressed endosomal cysteine protease, have been implicated in many diseases such as cancer and diabetes. Significantly, Cts L has been identified as a potential target for the treatment of COVID-19 due to its recently unveiled critical role in SARS-CoV-2 entry into the host cells. However, there are currently no clinically approved specific inhibitors of Cts L, as it is often challenging to obtain specificity against the many highly homologous cathepsin family cysteine proteases. Peptide-based agents are often promising protease inhibitors as they offer high selectivity and potency, but unfortunately are subject to degradation in vivo. Thioamide substitution, a single-atom O-to-S modification in the peptide backbone, has been shown to improve the proteolytic stability of peptides addressing this issue. Utilizing this approach, we demonstrate herein that good peptidyl substrates can be converted into sub-micromolar inhibitors of Cts L by a single thioamide substitution in the peptide backbone. We have designed and scanned several thioamide stabilized peptide scaffolds, in which one peptide, R-1A(S), was stabilized against proteolysis by all five cathepsins (Cts L, Cts V, Cts K, Cts S, and Cts B) while inhibiting Cts L with >25-fold specificity against the other cathepsins. We further showed that this stabilized R-1A(S) peptide could inhibit Cts L in human liver carcinoma lysates (IC50 = 19 mu M). Our study demonstrates that one can rationally design a stabilized, specific peptidyl protease inhibitor by strategic placement of a thioamide and reaffirms the place of this single-atom modification in the toolbox of peptide-based rational drug design.

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