| Literature DB >> 30380184 |
Laura Nevola1, Monica Varese1, Andrés Martín-Quirós2, Giacomo Mari1,3, Kay Eckelt2,4, Pau Gorostiza1,2,4,5, Ernest Giralt1,6.
Abstract
Progress in drug delivery is hampered by a lack of efficient strategies to target drugs with high specificity and precise spatiotemporal regulation. The remote control of nanoparticles and drugs with light allows regulation of their action site and dosage. Peptide-based drugs are highly specific, non-immunogenic, and can be designed to cross the plasma membrane. In order to combine target specificity and remote control of drug action, here we describe a versatile strategy based on a generalized template to design nanoswitchable peptides that modulate protein-protein interactions upon light activation. This approach is demonstrated to promote photomodulation of two important targets involved in apoptosis (the interactions Bcl-xL-Bak and MDM2-p53), but can be also applied to a large pool of therapeutically relevant protein-protein interactions mediated by α-helical motifs. The template can be adjusted using readily available information about hot spots (residues contributing most to the binding energy) at the protein-protein interface of interest.Entities:
Keywords: helical structures; optopharmacology; peptide engineering; photoswitchable peptides; protein-protein interactions
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30380184 DOI: 10.1002/cmdc.201800647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ChemMedChem ISSN: 1860-7179 Impact factor: 3.466