Literature DB >> 19156786

Heparin antagonism by polyvalent display of cationic motifs on virus-like particles.

Andrew K Udit1, Chris Everett, Andrew J Gale, Jennifer Reiber Kyle, Mihri Ozkan, M G Finn.   

Abstract

Particles to the rescue! The construction of cationic amino acid motifs on the surface of bacteriophage Qbeta by genetic engineering or chemical conjugation gives particles that are potent inhibitors of the anticoagulant action of heparin, which is a common anticlotting agent subject to clinical overdose.Polyvalent interactions allow biological structures to exploit low-affinity ligand-receptor binding events to affect physiological responses. We describe here the use of bacteriophage Qbeta as a multivalent platform for the display of polycationic motifs that act as heparin antagonists. Point mutations to the coat protein allowed us to generate capsids bearing the K16M, T18R, N10R, or D14R mutations; because 180 coat proteins form the capsid, the mutants provide a spectrum of particles differing in surface charge by as much as +540 units (K16M vs. D14R). Whereas larger poly-Arg insertions (for example, C-terminal Arg(8)) did not yield intact virions, it was possible to append chemically synthesized oligo-Arg peptides to stable wild-type (WT) and K16M platforms. Heparin antagonism by the particles was evaluated by using the activated partial thrombin time (aPTT) clotting assay; this revealed that T18R, D14R, and WT-(R(8)G(2))(95) were the most effective at disrupting heparin-mediated anticoagulation (>95 % inhibition). This activity agreed with measurements of zeta potential (ZP) and retention time on cation exchange chromatography for the genetic constructs, which distribute their added positive charge over the capsid surface (+180 and +360 for T18R and D14R relative to WT). The potent activity of WT-(R(8)G(2))(95), despite its relatively diminished overall surface charge is likely a consequence of the particle's presentation of locally concentrated regions with high positive charge density that interact with heparin's extensively sulfated domains. The engineered cationic capsids retained their ability to inhibit heparin at high concentrations and showed no anticlotting activity of the kind that limits the utility of antiheparin polycationic agents that are currently in clinical use.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19156786      PMCID: PMC2751660          DOI: 10.1002/cbic.200800493

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chembiochem        ISSN: 1439-4227            Impact factor:   3.164


  40 in total

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1.  Cell targeting with hybrid Qβ virus-like particles displaying epidermal growth factor.

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Authors:  Andrew J Gale; Darlene J Elias; Patricia M Averell; Paul S Teirstein; Mitchell Buck; Steven D Brown; Zinaida Polonskaya; Andrew K Udit; M G Finn
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Review 4.  Targeting heparin and heparan sulfate protein interactions.

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Review 7.  Biomolecular Assemblies: Moving from Observation to Predictive Design.

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9.  Small molecule antagonists of cell-surface heparan sulfate and heparin-protein interactions.

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Authors:  Geronda L Montalvo; Yao Zhang; Trevor M Young; Michael J Costanzo; Katie B Freeman; Jun Wang; Dylan J Clements; Emma Magavern; Robert W Kavash; Richard W Scott; Dahui Liu; William F Degrado
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