4.6 Article

Structure-activity relationships of linear and cyclic peptides containing the NGR tumor-homing motif

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 277, Issue 49, Pages 47891-47897

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M207500200

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Cyclic and linear peptides containing the Asn-Gly-Arg (NGR) motif have proven useful for delivering various anti-tumor compounds and viral particles to tumor vessels. We have investigated the role of cyclic constraints on the structure and tumor-homing properties of NGR peptides using tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) derivatives containing disulfide-bridged (CNGRC-TNF) and linear (GNGRG-TNF) NGR domains. Experiments carried out in animal models showed that both GNGRG and CNGRC can target TNF to tumors. However, the antitumor activity of CNGRC-TNF was > 10-fold higher than that of GNGRG-TNF. Molecular dynamic simulation of cyclic CNGRC showed the presence of a bend geometry involving residues Gly(3)-Arg(4). Molecular dynamic simulation of the same peptide without disulfide constraints showed that the most populated and thermodynamically favored configuration is characterized by the presence of a beta-turn involving residues Gly(3)-Arg(4) and hydrogen bonding interactions between the backbone atoms of Asn(2) and Cys(5). These results suggest that the NGR motif has a strong propensity to form beta-turn in linear peptides and may explain the finding that GNGRG peptide can target TNF to tumors, albeit to a lower extent than CNGRC. The disulfide bridge constraint is critical for stabilizing the bent conformation and for increasing the tumor targeting efficiency.

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