| Literature DB >> 22754349 |
Seiichi Tada1, Takashi Kitajima1, Yoshihiro Ito1.
Abstract
Growth factors play important roles in tissue regeneration. However, because of their instability and diffusible nature, improvements in their performance would be desirable for therapeutic applications. Conferring binding affinities would be one way to improve their applicability. Here we review techniques for conjugating growth factors to polypeptides with particular affinities. Conjugation has been designed at the level of gene fusion and of polypeptide ligation. We summarize and discuss the designs and applications of binding growth factors prepared by such conjugation approaches.Entities:
Keywords: collagen; growth factor; immobilization; peptide ligation; protein engineering; tissue engineering
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22754349 PMCID: PMC3382770 DOI: 10.3390/ijms13056053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Modes of action of growth factors. Growth factors interact with their receptors in a diffusible manner (e.g., by endocrine, paracrine, autocrine and intracrine pathways) or in a nondiffusible manner (e.g., by juxtacrine and matricrine pathways). Some growth factors are known to act in both ways.
Figure 2Three main factors in tissue engineering: cells, growth factors and matrices (scaffolds). The conjugation of growth factors and matrices provides a new approach for generating biofunctional substrates for regenerative medicine.
Figure 3Preparation of binding growth factors by genetic fusion or enzymatic peptide ligation methods. Whereas the genetic fusion method has been used in most studies of binding growth factors, the peptide ligation approach can be used for binding peptides containing noncanonical residues such as phosphorylated amino acids.
Gene-engineered binding growth factors which bind to biological and organic materials.
| Binding target | Growth factor | Fused polypeptide | Origin | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Natural substrate | Collagen Gelatin | TGFβ1 [ | CBD polypeptide | vWF |
| EGF [ | CBD (20 kDa) | Bacterial collagenase | ||
| PDGF [ | CBD polypeptide | Human collagenase | ||
| EGF [ | CBD (40 or 27 kDa) | Fibronectin | ||
| Fibrin Fibrinogen | NGF [ | FXIIIa substrate sequence | α2-plasmin inhibitor | |
| EGF [ | FBD (11 kDa) | Fibronectin | ||
| Cell (integrin) | EGF [ | Cell-binding domain (30 kDa) | Fibronectin | |
| EGF [ | Cell adhesive sequence | Fibronectin | ||
| Cell (integrin and IGF-I receptor) | IGF-I [ | Vitronectin (full size) | Vitronectin | |
| Artificial substrate | Solid surface | EGF [ | Fc region | Immunoglobulin |
| EGF [ | Elastin-like polypeptide | Elastin | ||
| Cellulose | SCF [ | Cellulose-binding domain | Bacterial xylanase | |
Key: BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; bFGF, basic fibroblast growth factor; BMP, bone morphogenetic protein; CBD, collagen-binding sites or domain; EGF, epidermal growth factor; FBD, fibronectin fibrin-binding domain; FXIIIa, activated coagulation factor XIII; HGF, hepatocyte growth factor; IGF-I, insulin-like growth factor; IGF-IR, insulin-like growth factor-I receptor; IGFBP4, insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 4; KGF, keratinocyte growth factor; LIF, leukemia inhibitory factor; NGF, nerve growth factor; NT3, neurotrophin-3; PDGF-BB, platelet-derived growth factor BB (homodimer); SCF, stem cell factor; TGFβ, transforming growth factor β; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; vWF, von Willebrand factor. Peptide sequences:
WREPSFMALS;
TKKTLRT;
NQEQVSPL or LNQEQVSPRKKC;
RGD;
RKLPDA;
(APGVGV) or (GVGVP).
Figure 4Stability of the growth-stimulating activity of collagen-binding epidermal growth factor (EGF). Fresh proteins or proteins stored at 4 °C for 30 days in culture medium (left graph) or bound to collagen-coated wells (right graph) were applied to cultures of human dermal fibroblasts (48-well plates). Filled columns, day 0; open columns, day 30. Cell growth activity was evaluated at seven days of culture using a WST1 colorimetric assay (absorbance at 450–650 nm; mean ± SD). Similar results were obtained for CBD-HGF (CBD = collagen-binding sites, HGF = hepatocyte growth factor)
List of inorganic material-binding peptides found by phage display.
| Peptide sequence | Binding target | References |
|---|---|---|
| HQPANDPSWYTG/NTISGLRYAPHM | BaTiO3 | |
| CRRWESKRC | SiO2 | |
| CTKRNNKRC/CHKKPSKSC | TiO2 | |
| VPSSGPQDTRTT | Aluminum/steel | |
| CNNPMHQNC/VISNHAESSRRL/SLTPLTTSHLRS | Semiconductor | |
| PTSTGQA/CPTSTGQAC | Platinum | |
| AYSSGAPPMPPF | Silver | |
| YDSRSMRPH | ZnO | |
| CGPRHTDGLRRIAARGPC | Cu2O | |
| RRTVKHHVN | Fe2O3 | |
| RKLPDAPGMHTW | TiO2/Si/Ag | |
| SVSVGMKPSPRP | Hydroxyapatite and tooth enamel | |
| VTKHLNQISQSY | Hydroxyapatite and bone-like minerals |
Figure 5Methodology of bioorthogonal chemistry. Chemical ligation, enzymatic ligation, and genetic incorporation are included.
Figure 6Scheme of the production and purification of hydroxyapatite-binding bone morphogenetic protein (BMP). Using a sortase reaction, a peptide carrying noncanonical amino acids (pSpS) was fused with the protein MBP-hBMP4 bearing a recognition sequence. After cleavage of the maltose-binding protein (MBP) moiety with Factor Xa, hBMP4-pSpS was isolated by His tag affinity.