| Literature DB >> 27048815 |
Stefan Krautwald1, Christin Dewitz2, Fred Fändrich3, Ulrich Kunzendorf2.
Abstract
Development of the means to efficiently and continuously renew missing and non-functional proteins in diseased cells remains a major goal in modern molecular medicine. While gene therapy has the potential to achieve this, substantial obstacles must be overcome before clinical application can be considered. A promising alternative approach is the direct delivery of non-permeant active biomolecules, such as oligonucleotides, peptides and proteins, to the affected cells with the purpose of ameliorating an advanced disease process. In addition to receptor-mediated endocytosis, cell-penetrating peptides are widely used as vectors for rapid translocation of conjugated molecules across cell membranes into intracellular compartments and the delivery of these therapeutic molecules is generally referred to as novel prospective protein therapy. As a broad coverage of the enormous amount of published data in this field is unrewarding, this review will provide a brief, focused overview of the technology and a summary of recent studies of the most commonly used protein transduction domains and their potential as therapeutic agents for the treatment of cellular damage and the prevention of regulated cell death.Entities:
Keywords: Cell-penetrating peptide (CPP); Protein therapy; Protein transduction domain (PTD); Regulated cell death (RCD)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27048815 PMCID: PMC4887531 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-016-2200-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Commonly used cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs)
| Peptide | Sequence | References |
|---|---|---|
| HIV-1 Tat | GRKKRRQRRR | [ |
| MAP | KLALKLALKALKAALKLA | [ |
| MTS | AAVALLPAVLLALLAP | [ |
| MPG | GLAFLGFLGAAGSTMGAWSQPKKKRKV | [ |
| Penetratina | RQIKIWFQNRRMKWKK | [ |
| Pep-1 | KETWWETWWTEWSQPKKRKV | [ |
| Poly-arginine (R8-R12) | RRRRRRRR-RRRRRRRRRRRR | [ |
| Transportan | GWTLNSAGYLLGKINLKALAALAKKIL | [ |
| VP22 | DAATATRGRSAASRPTQRPRAPARSASRPRRPVQ | [ |
aDerived from the Drosophila Antennapedia homeodomain (residues 43–58)
Fig. 1Proposed mechanisms for cellular internalization of CPPs. First of all, each CPP-conjugate binds to the plasma membrane via electrostatic interactions. Subsequently, the complete conjugate is internalized and released through various conceivable mechanisms. Route 1 represents cell entry of the CPP-complex through the formation of an inverted micelle (aggregates of colloidal surfactants in which the polar groups are concentrated in the interior and the lipophilic groups extend outward into the solvent). The majority of CPPs probably enter cells by an endocytosis-driven pathway which is depicted as Route 2. Route 3 is a direct, energy- and receptor-independent penetration and transduction process of the construct through the plasma membrane
Selected in vivo studies using CPP-conjugated drugs as therapeutic agent of RCD
| Cargo | Proposed target | Injury model | Protection | Study |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FLIP | Caspase-8 | Multiorgan failure in mice | Improve survival | [ |
| crmA | Caspases-1 and -8 | Acute myocardial infarction in mice | Cardioprotective | [ |
| BH4 | VDAC activity | Fulminant Fas-induced liver failure and acute myocardial infarction in mice | Cardioprotective | [ |
| SOD1/CAT | Antioxidative enzymes | Myocardial infarction in rats | Protected in a combined fashion against IRI | [ |
| haFGF | Brain neurons | Mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease | Neuroprotective (reduce amyloid protein deposits) | [ |
| Neuroglobin | Cerebral neurons | Middle cerebral artery occlusion in mice | Reduction of infarct size | [ |
| Hsp70 | Chaperone activity | Transient focal cerebral ischemia in mice | Neuroprotective in stroke | [ |
| NEMO | NF-κB pathway | Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in rats | Ameliorates TNBS-induced colitis | [ |
| D-isomer of p53 | Reactivation of p53 | Peritoneal carcinomatosis in mice | Increase longevity of mice harboring lymphoma | [ |
| PNP | PNP replacement therapy | Metabolic disorder in mice | Corrects gene deficiency | [ |
List of selected currently ongoing clinical trials employing CPP-conjugates
| Company | CPP-conjugate | Label | Indication | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CellGate, Inc. | R7-cyclosporine A | PsorBan® | Topical treatment of psoriasis | Phase II clinical trials terminated | [ |
| Revance Therapeutics, Inc. | Tat-Botulinum toxin | RT-001 | Topical treatment of facial wrinkles | Currently in a Phase III clinical development program | [ |
| Capstone Therapeutics | PTD4-Hsp20 | AZX-100 | Prevention of dermal/keloid scarring | Phase II completed in 2012 | [ |
| Amgen | Tat-PKCδ inhibitor | KAI-9803 | Acute myocardial infarction | Phase II completed in 2011 | [ |
| Amgen | Tat-PKCε inhibitor | KAI-1678 | Neuropathic pain | Phase II completed in 2011: not efficacious | [ |
| KAI Pharmaceuticals | Tat-PKCε activator | KAI-1455 | Ischemic injury | Phase I initiated | [ |
| Auris Medical (Xigen) | Tat-JNK inhibitor | XG-102 | Inflammatory bowel disease | Phase I completed in 2012 (Xigen initiates enrolment in a phase III trial for ocular inflammation) | [ |
| Avi Biopharma | PPMOa | AVI-5038 | Duchenne muscular dystrophy | Currently in preclinical development | [ |
| National AIDS Center, Rome (Italy) and Novartis | Tat-V2-deleted Env proteins | ISS T-002 | HIV vaccine (therapeutic immunization) | Entered Phase II | [ |
| Traversa Therapeutics/Sanofi-Aventis | multiple PTD siRNAs | PTD-DRBDb | Degradation of target mRNA | Preclinical studies | [ |
| Diatos and Drais Pharmaceuticals | Vectocell®-SN38 | DTS-108 | Cancer treatment | Phase I | [ |
| NoNO Inc. | Tat-NR2B9c | NA-1 | Ischemic brain damage | Phase III | [ |
aPenetrating phosphodiamidate morpholino oligomer for skipping dystrophin gene
bDouble-stranded RNA binding domain