| Literature DB >> 29734750 |
Graham McClorey1, Subhashis Banerjee2.
Abstract
The promise of nucleic acid based oligonucleotides as effective genetic therapies has been held back by their low bioavailability and poor cellular uptake to target tissues upon systemic administration. One such strategy to improve upon delivery is the use of short cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) that can be either directly attached to their cargo through covalent linkages or through the formation of noncovalent nanoparticle complexes that can facilitate cellular uptake. In this review, we will highlight recent proof-of-principle studies that have utilized both of these strategies to improve nucleic acid delivery and discuss the prospects for translation of this approach for clinical application.Entities:
Keywords: antisense oligonucleotides; cell-penetrating peptides; delivery
Year: 2018 PMID: 29734750 PMCID: PMC6027240 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines6020051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Examples of cell-penetrating peptide sequences and nucleic acid cargo application described in this review. SSO, splice-switching oligonucleotide; DMD, Duchenne muscular dystrophy; DM1, Myotonic dystrophy type I; SMA, Spinal muscular atrophy; 2OMe, 2′-O-methyl.
| Peptide | Sequence | Application |
|---|---|---|
| Covalent conjugated CPPs | ||
| B | (RXRRBR)2XB | SSO for DMD, DM1 [ |
| B-MSP | (RXRRBR)2XBASSLNIA | SSO for DMD [ |
| Pip6 | RXRRBRRXR YQFLI RXRBRXRB | SSO for DMD, SMA [ |
| M12 | RRQPPRSISSHP | SSO for DMD [ |
| Br-ApoE(K→A) | Ac-LRALRARLLRGGAc-LRALRARLLRGGKX-Bpg-G | SSO for SMA [ |
| P4 | LGAQSNF | SSO (2OMe) for DMD [ |
| (RXR)4 | RXRRXRRXRRXR | anti-viral anti-bacterial [ |
| Nanoparticle forming CPPs | ||
| MPG-8 | βAFLGWLGAWGTMGWSPKKKRK-Cya | siRNA for xenograft tumor model [ |
| CADY | Ac-GLWRALWRLLRSLWRLLWRA-Cya | siRNA, cell lines (various) [ |
| RICK | KWLLRWLSRLLRWLARWLG | siRNA, human glioblastoma cells [ |
| Pepfect 3 | stearyl-AGYLLGKINLKALAALAKKIL-NH2 | Plasmid DNA, cell lines, intramuscular [ |
| Pepfect 6 | See reference | siRNA, cell lines (various), systemic IV [ |
| Pepfect 14 | stearyl-AGYLLGKLLOOLAAAALOOLL-NH2 | Plasmid DNA, SSO [ |
| RVG-9R | YTIWMPENPRPGTPCDIFTNSRGKRASNGGGGRRRRRRRRR | siRNA, brain-targeting disease models [ |
| 599 | GLFEAIEGFIENGWEGMIDGWYGGGGRRRRRRRRRK | siRNA, oral cancer [ |
| H3K(+H)4b | Branched KHHHKHHHKHHHHKHHHK | siRNA, tumor xenograft [ |
Figure 1Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) can be conjugated to their ASO cargo through direct covalent conjugation through a linker, most typically exemplified by cationic or amphipathic CPP conjugation to a neutral-charge oligonucleotide such as phosphorodiamidate morpholino (PMO). Noncovalent conjugation occurs through electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions between the CPP and ASO, exemplified by siRNA here, to form nanoparticle like complexes.
Figure 2Cell-penetrating peptide internalization occurs through direct penetration (left) or endocytic pathways (right). Direct translocation of CPPs into the cellular space can occur through energy-independent mechanisms that cause membrane destabilization such as the “carpet-like” model or formation of inverted micelles, or through direct pore formation such as the “barrel-stave” model. The majority of CPPs are thought to be taken up through energy-dependent endocytic internalization either through clathrin-dependent, caveolin-mediated, and clathrin/caveolae independent endocytosis or micropinocytosis before escape from endosome compartments into the cellular environment.