4.7 Article

Immunoglobulin Fc-Fused Peptide without C-Terminal Arg or Lys Residue Augments Neuropilin-1-Dependent Tumor Vascular Permeability

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 394-402

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.7b00761

Keywords

C-end rule; neuropilin-1; vascular permeability; yeast surface display; peptide engineering

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation - Korean government [2014M3C1A3051470, 2016R1A2A2A05005108]
  2. National Research Foundation of Korea [2016R1A2A2A05005108, 2014M3C1A3051470] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Neuropilin-1 (NRP1), which functions as a coreceptor for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and is implicated in vascular permeability and tumorigenesis, has been targeted by peptides that specifically bind to the VEGF-binding region on NRP1. Like natural VEGF ligands, all known peptides with NRP1-binding activity bind only through a carboxy (C)-terminal R/K-x-x-R/K sequence motif (x stands for any amino acids); this strict requirement is called the C -end rule (CendR). Here, we report immunoglobulin Fc-fused NRP1-specific peptides deviating from CendR. We screened a yeast surface-displayed Fc-fused non-CendR peptide library against NRP1 and isolated Fc-V12, wherein V12 peptide comprising 12 amino acids has a PPRV sequence at its C-terminal end. Although Fc-V12 lacked the CendR motif, it showed selective binding to the VEGF-binding region of NRP1 and triggered cellular internalization of NRP1, which resulted in enhanced extravasation into tumor tissues and tumor tissue penetration of the Fc-fused peptide along with the coinjected chemical drug in tumor-bearing mice. Through a saturation mutagenesis study, we identified that the Val residue at the C-terminus of Fc-V12 is crucial for NRP1 binding. We further improved NRP1 affinity of Fc-V12 (K-D = similar to 761 nM) through directed evolution of the upstream sequence of PPRV to obtain Fc-V12-33 (K-D = similar to 17.4 nM), which exhibited enhanced NRP1-mediated vascular permeability as compared with Fc-V12. Our results provide functional Fc-fused non-CendR peptides, which bind to the VEGF-binding region of NRP1 and enhance vascular permeability, expanding the sequence space of NRP1-targeting peptides.

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