| Literature DB >> 26840305 |
Mie Kristensen1, Ditlev Birch2, Hanne Mørck Nielsen3.
Abstract
The hydrophilic nature of peptides and proteins renders them impermeable to cell membranes. Thus, in order to successfully deliver peptide and protein-based therapeutics across the plasma membrane or epithelial and endothelial barriers, a permeation enhancing strategy must be employed. Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) constitute a promising tool and have shown applications for peptide and protein delivery into cells as well as across various epithelia and the blood-brain barrier (BBB). CPP-mediated delivery of peptides and proteins may be pursued via covalent conjugation of the CPP to the cargo peptide or protein or via physical complexation obtained by simple bulk-mixing of the CPP with its cargo. Both approaches have their pros and cons, and which is the better choice likely relates to the physicochemical properties of the CPP and its cargo as well as the route of administration, the specific barrier and the target cell. Besides the physical barrier, a metabolic barrier must be taken into consideration when applying peptide-based delivery vectors, such as the CPPs, and stability-enhancing strategies are commonly employed to prolong the CPP half-life. The mechanisms by which CPPs translocate cell membranes are believed to involve both endocytosis and direct translocation, but are still widely investigated and discussed. The fact that multiple factors influence the mechanisms responsible for cellular CPP internalization and the lack of sensitive methods for detection of the CPP, and in some cases the cargo, further complicates the design and conduction of conclusive mechanistic studies.Entities:
Keywords: biological barriers; cell-penetrating peptides; delivery vectors; drug delivery; peptide and protein drugs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26840305 PMCID: PMC4783919 DOI: 10.3390/ijms17020185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Selected peptide and protein cargos delivered by cell-penetrating peptides highlighting the formulation approach applied and the assays employed for studying tissue distribution or for verification of delivery.
| Cell-Penetrating Peptide | Peptide or Protein Pargo | Formulation Approach | Assay | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tat | β-galactosidase | Covalent conjugation | Tissue distribution of β-galactosidase in mice following IP administration. | [ |
| Tat | All- | Covalent conjugation | Survival of peritoneal carcinomatosis mouse model following IP administration. | [ |
| All- | p53~ri-HA-2 b | Covalent conjugation | Survival of animals in a peritoneal carcinomatosis mouse model following IP administration. | [ |
| Tat | P15 | Covalent conjugation | Apoptosis in various tumor cell lines and regression of tumor size upon intratumoral injections to mice. | [ |
| FGF4 c-derived peptide [ | SOCS3 d | Covalent conjugation | Uptake into mouse macrophage cells and suppression of the production of inflammatory cytokines in mice following IP administration. | [ |
| R9 | c-Myc, Sox2, Oct4, Klf4 | Covalent conjugation | Induction of fibroblasts from human newborn into pluripotent stem cells. | [ |
| Pep-1 | Various peptides and proteins | Physical complexation | Uptake of cargo peptide or protein in cells of various cell culture models. | [ |
| Tat | Insulin | Physical complexation | Insulin permeation across Caco-2 monolayers. | [ |
| All- | Insulin, GLP-1 e, gastrin | Physical complexation | Cargo plasma concentration following intestinal loop administration to rats. | [ |
| Penetratin | Insulin, GLP-1, exendin-4 | Physical complexation | Cargo plasma concentration following nasal or intestinal loop administration to rats. | [ |
| All- | Insulin | Physical complexation | Blood glucose level following administration by oral gavage to rats. | [ |
| Shuffle | Insulin | Physical complexation | Insulin plasma concentration following nasal administration to rats. | [ |
| PenetraMax | Insulin | Physical complexation | Insulin plasma concentration following intestinal loop administration to rats. | [ |
| Tat | Bcl-xl | Covalent conjugation | Brain distribution of Bcl-xl and reduction of cerebral infarction. | [ |
| Tat | NR2B9c f | Covalent conjugation | Brain concentration of NR2B9c in rats and reduction of cerebral infarction in mice following IP administration. | [ |
| Tat | GDNF g | Covalent conjugation | Brain concentration of GDNF and reduction of cerebral infarction following intravenous administration to mice. | [ |
a Retro-inverso; b hemaglutinin-2; c fibroblast growth factor 4; d suppressor of cytokine signaling 3; e glucagon-like peptide-1; f 9-amino acid C-terminal part of the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDA) NR2B subunit; g glial-derived neurotrophic factor.
Figure 1Applications for cell-penetrating peptides for the delivery of peptides and proteins into cells and across epithelia and the blood-brain barrier. Dashed arrows specifies target delivery site being in the cytosol or reached by systemic circulation.
Figure 2Simple illustration of mechanisms by which cell-penetrating peptides have been suggested to traverse the plasma membrane by endocytosis or direct translocation. Dimensions are obtained from [77]. Modified from [96] with permission from Elsevier. Blue helixes represent the CPPs, the arrow the uptake process subsequent to membrane interaction.