5agx Citations

α/β-Peptide Foldamers Targeting Intracellular Protein-Protein Interactions with Activity in Living Cells.

Abstract

Peptides can be developed as effective antagonists of protein-protein interactions, but conventional peptides (i.e., oligomers of l-α-amino acids) suffer from significant limitations in vivo. Short half-lives due to rapid proteolytic degradation and an inability to cross cell membranes often preclude biological applications of peptides. Oligomers that contain both α- and β-amino acid residues ("α/β-peptides") manifest decreased susceptibility to proteolytic degradation, and when properly designed these unnatural oligomers can mimic the protein-recognition properties of analogous "α-peptides". This report documents an extension of the α/β-peptide approach to target intracellular protein-protein interactions. Specifically, we have generated α/β-peptides based on a "stapled" Bim BH3 α-peptide, which contains a hydrocarbon cross-link to enhance α-helix stability. We show that a stapled α/β-peptide can structurally and functionally mimic the parent stapled α-peptide in its ability to enter certain types of cells and block protein-protein interactions associated with apoptotic signaling. However, the α/β-peptide is nearly 100-fold more resistant to proteolysis than is the parent stapled α-peptide. These results show that backbone modification, a strategy that has received relatively little attention in terms of peptide engineering for biomedical applications, can be combined with more commonly deployed peripheral modifications such as side chain cross-linking to produce synergistic benefits.

Articles - 5agx mentioned but not cited (2)

  1. α/β-Peptide Foldamers Targeting Intracellular Protein-Protein Interactions with Activity in Living Cells. Checco JW, Lee EF, Evangelista M, Sleebs NJ, Rogers K, Pettikiriarachchi A, Kershaw NJ, Eddinger GA, Belair DG, Wilson JL, Eller CH, Raines RT, Murphy WL, Smith BJ, Gellman SH, Fairlie WD. J Am Chem Soc 137 11365-11375 (2015)
  2. Competition Between Phenothiazines and BH3 Peptide for the Binding Site of the Antiapoptotic BCL-2 Protein. do Carmo AL, Bettanin F, Oliveira Almeida M, Pantaleão SQ, Rodrigues T, Homem-de-Mello P, Honorio KM. Front Chem 8 235 (2020)


Reviews citing this publication (12)

  1. Impact of non-proteinogenic amino acids in the discovery and development of peptide therapeutics. Ding Y, Ting JP, Liu J, Al-Azzam S, Pandya P, Afshar S. Amino Acids 52 1207-1226 (2020)
  2. Targeting recognition surfaces on natural proteins with peptidic foldamers. Checco JW, Gellman SH. Curr Opin Struct Biol 39 96-105 (2016)
  3. Using Peptidomimetics and Constrained Peptides as Valuable Tools for Inhibiting Protein⁻Protein Interactions. Robertson NS, Spring DR. Molecules 23 E959 (2018)
  4. Stabilized helical peptides: overview of the technologies and its impact on drug discovery. Klein M. Expert Opin Drug Discov 12 1117-1125 (2017)
  5. Cross Talk Between Cellular Redox State and the Antiapoptotic Protein Bcl-2. Pohl SÖ, Agostino M, Dharmarajan A, Pervaiz S. Antioxid Redox Signal 29 1215-1236 (2018)
  6. Novel Materials From the Supramolecular Self-Assembly of Short Helical β3-Peptide Foldamers. Kulkarni K, Habila N, Del Borgo MP, Aguilar MI. Front Chem 7 70 (2019)
  7. Modulating Protein-Protein Interactions by Cyclic and Macrocyclic Peptides. Prominent Strategies and Examples. González-Muñiz R, Bonache MÁ, Pérez de Vega MJ. Molecules 26 445 (2021)
  8. Applications of in Silico Methods for Design and Development of Drugs Targeting Protein-Protein Interactions. Cicaloni V, Trezza A, Pettini F, Spiga O. Curr Top Med Chem 19 534-554 (2019)
  9. Strategies to expand peptide functionality through hybridisation with a small molecule component. Wu Y, Williams J, Calder EDD, Walport LJ. RSC Chem Biol 2 151-165 (2021)
  10. Discovery, development and application of drugs targeting BCL-2 pro-survival proteins in cancer. Lee EF, Fairlie WD. Biochem Soc Trans 49 2381-2395 (2021)
  11. Amino acid modifications for conformationally constraining naturally occurring and engineered peptide backbones: Insights from the Protein Data Bank. Di Costanzo L, Dutta S, Burley SK. Biopolymers 109 e23230 (2018)
  12. Design of Protein Segments and Peptides for Binding to Protein Targets. Gupta S, Azadvari N, Hosseinzadeh P. Biodes Res 2022 9783197 (2022)

Articles citing this publication (43)