4.8 Article

Cholesterol-directed nanoparticle assemblies based on single amino acid peptide mutations activate cellular uptake and decrease tumor volume

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue 11, Pages 7552-7559

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7sc02616a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSFC [91529101, 21572057, 21778017]
  2. Burroughs Welcome Fund Career Award at the Scientific Interface (CASI)
  3. Simons Foundation
  4. Beckman Foundation
  5. China Scholarship Council
  6. BBRF

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Peptide drugs have been difficult to translate into effective therapies due to their low in vivo stability. Here, we report a strategy to develop peptide-based therapeutic nanoparticles by screening a peptide library differing by single-site amino acid mutations of lysine-modified cholesterol. Certain cholesterol-modified peptides are found to promote and stabilize peptide a-helix formation, resulting in selectively cell-permeable peptides. One cholesterol-modified peptide self-assembles into stable nanoparticles with considerable alpha-helix propensity stabilized by intermolecular van der Waals interactions between inter-peptide cholesterol molecules, and shows 68.3% stability after incubation with serum for 16 h. The nanoparticles in turn interact with cell membrane cholesterols that are disproportionately present in cancer cell membranes, inducing lipid raft-mediated endocytosis and cancer cell death. Our results introduce a strategy to identify peptide nanoparticles that can effectively reduce tumor volumes when administered to in in vivo mice models. Our results also provide a simple platform for developing peptide-based anticancer drugs.

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