| Literature DB >> 26159518 |
Ban Xiong Tan1, Christopher J Brown1, Fernando J Ferrer1, Tsz Ying Yuen2, Soo Tng Quah1, Boon Hong Chan1, Anna E Jansson3, Hsiang Ling Teo3, Pär Nordlund3, David P Lane1.
Abstract
Previous publications on stapled peptide inhibitors against Mdm2/Mdm4-p53 interactions have established that this new class of drugs have the potential to be easily optimised to attain high binding affinity and specificity, but the mechanisms controlling their cellular uptake and target engagement remain elusive and controversial. To aid in understanding the rules of peptide and staple design, and to enable rapid optimisation, we employed the newly-developed cellular thermal shift assay (CETSA). CETSA was able to validate stapled peptide binding to Mdm2 and Mdm4, and the method was also used to determine the extent of cellular uptake, cellular availability, and intracellular binding of the endogenous target proteins in its native environment. Our data suggest that while the stapled peptides engage their targets intracellularly, more work is needed to improve their cellular entry and target engagement efficiency in vivo. CETSA now provides a valuable tool to optimize such in vivo properties of stapled peptides.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26159518 PMCID: PMC4498326 DOI: 10.1038/srep12116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Amino acid sequence and their respective IC50s (competition assay) of stapled peptides synthesised by Brown et al. and Chang et al. used in this study.
| Staplin-Control | Ac-1TSAXrEYAALAXs11-NH2 | >10 | >10 |
| Staplin | Ac-1TSFXrEYWALLXs11-NH2 | 0.94 ± 0.0410 | 0.66 ± 0.0610 |
| Staplin-2 | Ac-1TSFXrEYW(6Cl)WALLXs11-NH2 | 0.32 ± 0.0210 | 3.49 ± 0.6310 |
| ATSP-7041 | Ac-1LTFXrEYWAQ(Cba)XSSAA14-NH2 | 0.9111 | 2.3111 |
| Nutlin-3a | N.A. | 0.096 | >106 |
Nutlin-3 was used as a positive control for Mdm2 thermal stabilisation. IC50s are obtained from the references indicated.
Figure 1Lysate CETSA demonstrated that stapled peptides based on Mdm2-binding site of p53 bind to both Mdm2 and Mdm4.
a,b. Thermal shift plots of lysate CETSA of nutlin-3 and stapled peptide interactions with Mdm2 (a) and Mdm4 (b) and their corresponding ΔTm50 values with 95% confidence intervals, calculated assuming symmetric errors of Tm50s. R2 values of curve fitting are also included. Nutlin-3 and peptides were added to 5 mg/ml AML2 cell lysates at 10 μM.
Figure 2Lysate CETSA can be used to assay for the effect of stapled peptide modification on binding affinities.
a. Modification of stapling-2 with FAM reduced the binding affinity to Mdm2 and Mdm4. b. FAM labelling on ATSP-7041 increased its affinity to Mdm2, but not Mdm4. c. Differences in Tm50 between labelled and unlabelled stapled peptides. d. T22 p53 reporter assay with the labelled and unlabelled stapled peptides in the presence of 10% FCS.
Figure 3Comparisons between CETSA on whole cells and cell lysates can be used to determine drug cellular entry and target engagement.
a. The thermal stabilisation of Mdm2 by 10 μM nutlin-3 was assayed by CETSA with cell lysates and whole cells. In both cases, nutlin-3 resulted in very similar thermal shifts, as determined by the ΔΔTm50. b. The thermal shift of CETSA with whole cells with 25 μM Staplin-2 showed differences in thermal shifts. c. Confocal microscopy of HCT116 cells treated with Staplin-2FAM prior to fixation showed vesicular accumulation of the FAM-labelled peptides.