| Literature DB >> 30539365 |
Woo-Jin Jeong1, Jiyoon Bu1, Luke J Kubiatowicz1, Stephanie S Chen1, YoungSoo Kim2, Seungpyo Hong3,4.
Abstract
Peptide-nanoparticle conjugates (PNCs) have recently emerged as a versatile tool for biomedical applications. Synergism between the two promising classes of materials allows enhanced control over their biological behaviors, overcoming intrinsic limitations of the individual materials. Over the past decades, a myriad of PNCs has been developed for various applications, such as drug delivery, inhibition of pathogenic biomolecular interactions, molecular imaging, and liquid biopsy. This paper provides a comprehensive overview of existing technologies that have been recently developed in the broad field of PNCs, offering a guideline especially for investigators who are new to this field.Entities:
Keywords: Drug delivery; Liquid biopsy; Molecular imaging; Peptide–nanoparticle conjugates; Protein interaction inhibitor
Year: 2018 PMID: 30539365 PMCID: PMC6289934 DOI: 10.1186/s40580-018-0170-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Converg ISSN: 2196-5404
Fig. 1Discovery of artificial bioactive peptides and their conjugation with nanoparticles for biomedical applications
Fig. 2a Comparison between monovalent- and multivalent interactions. b Selectivity in multivalent interactions. c Multidirectional ligand display and d statistical rebinding on a multivalent object
Peptide–nanoparticle conjugates for efficient drug delivery
| Application | Peptide | Nanoparticle (NP) | Therapeutic agents | In vitro study | In vivo study | Refs. | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Name | Target | Type | Complex size (nm) | Model | Efficacy | Model | Efficacy | |||
| Nuclear-target drug delivery | TAT | Target importin alpha and beta for intranuclear translocalization | Mesoporous Silica | 25, 50 | Doxorubicin | MTT Assay for DOX-Carrier Cytotoxicity | Hela cell viability: ~ 30% | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Adenoviral NLS | Interact with nuclear pore complex for nuclear uptake | BSA-coated AuNP | 25 | Preliminary study (N/A) | LDH colorimetric toxicity assay for Carrier Cytotoxicity | HepG2 cell viability: < 5% decrease compared to control | N/A | N/A | [ | |
| Adenoviral RME | For receptor mediated endocytosis into the cell | |||||||||
| Adenoviral NLS | Targets nuclear pore complex for NP entrance into nucleus | AuNP | 13 | SiRNA | MCF-7 (Breast), HeLa (Cervix), HepG2 (Liver) cancer cells | TK1 mRNA expression decreased 10% | MCF7 tumor-bearing mice | Inhibited tumor growth. ~ 2.5× lower weight than control | [ | |
| Transdermal drug delivery | TAT | Assists with membrane disruption and cellular uptake | AuNP | 200 | pDNA | Nude mouse skin | Past epidermis and within dermal layer | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Transfection of B16F10 Cells | 1.71 * 107 RLU/mg (significantly higher) | |||||||||
| TD | Targets the Na+/K+-ATPase beta-subunit of the stratum corneum for enhanced skin permeability | Liposome | 105 | Vemurafenib | Franz diffusion cell system | ~ 60 µg Vem quantity in receptor after 24 h. (significantly higher) | BALB/c nude mice | Significant antitumor efficacy | [ | |
| TAT | Arginine groups in TAT bind stratum corneum and assist NP movement into epidermal layers | Nano lipid crystal NPs | 180 | Celecoxib | Hairless rat skin permeation using Franz diffusion cells | Threefold higher conc. in stratum corneum. Highest epidermal concentration (90 µg/g of skin). Max depth 120 µm | N/A | N/A | [ | |
| Blood brain barrier drug delivery | G23 | Targets gangliosides GM1 and GT1b for the mediated transport of NPs across the BBB | Polymersome | 165 | Preliminary study (N/A) | hCMEC/D3 cells on transwell filters | ~ 30% transcytotic capacity (4 times increase over nontargeted) | BALB/c nude mice | Significant accumulation in brain parenchyma. Also, accumulation in cortex, striatum, midbrain, pons and cerebellum | [ |
| LNP | Cell penetrating peptide for cellular uptake | DGL-PEG | 90 | pDNA | BCEC cells in well plates | Papp achieved 92.43 * 10−6 cm/s and ~ 275 pmol total transport (both significantly higher) | Nude orthotopic glioma-bearing mice | Increased median survival time and statistically significant survival prolongation | [ | |
Fig. 3a Molecular models depicting gold nanoparticle binding-induced stabilization of α-helical structure. b Interactions of free peptides and peptide–nanoparticle conjugates with HIV-1 spike proteins. c Peptide hybrid-functionalized gold nanoparticles inhibiting amyloid-β aggregation
Peptide-nanoparticle conjugates for molecular imaging nanoprobes
| Imaging | Peptide | Nanoparticle (NP) | Animal studies | Results | Refs. | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Modality | Probe | Name | Target or role | Type | Size | |||
| NIR | FITC | DEVD peptide sequence | Cleave caspase-3 | Biotinylated NP, Acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-Cys(StBu)-Lys(Biotin)-CBT | 100–300 nm | N/A | Twofold enhanced (fluorescent intensity, vs. SA-FITC) | [ |
| Zn2+ coordinated cyclic peptide NP (f-PNP) | RGD | Targets αvβ3 Integrin | Fluorescent cyclic peptide NP (f-PNP, self-assembled) | 28 nm | Xenografted EC mouse model | Highly photostable and narrow emission spectrum | [ | |
| Small-molecule NIR-II organic dye | RM26 peptide | Targets gastrin-releasing peptide receptor | DSPE-mPEG NP | 60 nm | U87MG (glioblastoma) tumor bearing mouse model | Highly sensitive and specific to GRPR | [ | |
| CT | AuNP | RGD | Targets αvβ3 integrin | Dendrimer-entrapped gold nanoparticles (Au DENPs) | 4.0 nm (Au core) | N/A | Enhanced X-ray attenuation compared to Omnipaque | [ |
| AuNP + IR780 (Fluor) | Angiopep-2 | Targets glioma | DTX-loaded PLGA@Au NP | 180 nm | U87MG (glioblastoma) tumor bearing mice | 4 h (Whitening effect AT the target site) | [ | |
| AuNP + Cy5.5 (Fluor) | Fibrin-targeting peptide and Thrombin-activatable fluorescent peptide | Targets fibrin and Cleave thrombin | Glycol-chitosan-coated AuNP (GC-AuNP) and SiO2@AuNP | 127 nm (Pep-GC-AuNP) and 39.8 nm (Pep-SiO2@AuNP) | C57Bl/6 mouse model | Remained at the target site for up to 3 weeks | [ | |
| PET | 18F | CK and CLPFFD peptides | Targets β-amyloid fiber | AuNP | 12 nm (hybrids) | Sprague–Dawley rat model | NPs were trapped by reticuloendothelial system (RES) | [ |
| 64Cu | RGD | Targets αvβ3 integrin | Au-tripods | 10–15 nm | U87MG (glioblastoma) tumor bearing mice | Threefold enhanced (PAI contrast, vs. blocking group) | [ | |
| 125I | RGD | Targets αvβ3 integrin | PEO dendrimer | 12 nm | Unilateral hindlimb ischemia-induced mice | 50-fold enhanced (affinity, vs. free peptide) | [ | |
| MRI | Iron oxide | RGD | Targets αvβ3 integrin | Iron oxide NP | < 10 nm (NP) | U87MG (glioblastoma) tumor bearing mice | 42% (tumor MR signal intensity reduction, 15% for free peptide) | [ |
| Iron oxide | RGD | Targets αvβ3 integrin | Superparamagnetic polymeric micelles (SPPM): SPIO NPs inside the core of a PEG-PLA co-polymer micelle | 9.9 nm (SPIO) | A549 (lung), MDA-MB-231 (breast), U87MG (Glioblastoma) tumor bearing mice | 10−12 mol/L (detection limit) | [ | |
| Iron oxide | CREKA | Targets fibrin | Amino dextran-coated SPIO | 50 nm | Mouse model | NPs accumulates in tumor vessel → self-amplifying tumor homing | [ | |
| Multi-modal | Hollow Au nanosphere (HAuNS, CT) | RGD | Targets αvβ3 integrin | HAuNS | 44.7 nm | VX2 tumor-bearing rabbit model | 0.20% (tumor uptake, vs. 0.099% for non-RGD NP) | [ |
| Cy5 (Fluor) | Activatable cell penetrating peptides (ACPPs) | Targets active MMP-2 and -9 | G5 PAMAM dendrimer | 4.6 nm | HT-1080 (fibrosarcoma) tumor-harboring mice | 4- to 15-fold enhanced (NP uptake, vs. unconjugated peptides) | [ | |
Peptide–nanoparticle conjugates for biomarker detection
| Biomarker | Peptide (Pep) | Nanoparticle (NP) | In vitro studies | Clinical application | Refs. | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target | Affinity (method) | Type | Size | In vitro model | Capture/detection | |||
| CTC | EpCAM | KD: 2.69 × 10−10 M (SPR) | Iron oxide magnetic NP | 235 nm (NP) | MCF-7, SK-BR-3 (breast), PC3 (prostate), Hep G2 (Liver) | 90% (capture) | N/A | [ |
| HER2 | Capacity: 70% | Iron oxide magnetic NP | 200 nm | MCF-7, SK-BR3 (Breast), SKOV3 (ovarian) | 75% (capture) | N/A | [ | |
| EGFR | KD: 4.59 × 10−4 M (AFM) | Magnetic nanovesicles | 219 nm | SMMC-7721 (hepatoma) | 90% (capture) | Tested with 25 lung cancer patients’ samples. | [ | |
| EGFR | N/A | AuNP | 60 nm | Tu212 (head and neck), H292, H460 (Lung), MDA-MB-231 (Breast) | 1–720 CTCs/mL (sensitivity) | Tested with 19 head and neck cancer patients’ samples | [ | |
| Exosome and extracellular Vesicle | CD63 | N/A | Nickel Dynabeads | N/A | Human serum obtained from 10 healthy volunteers | 54% (capture) | Tested with 15 HCC and 18 pancreatic patients’ samples | [ |
| Hsp70 | N/A | Streptavidin-coupled Dynabeads | N/A | Lysates from MCF-7 (breast) | Similar with ultracentrifugation (capture) | N/A | [ | |
| cfDNA and miRNA | miR-21, miR-96, miR-125b | N/A | Nano metal—organic framework (NMOF, UiO-66) | 125 nm | Synthetic miRNA MCF-7, MDA-MB-231 (breast), MCF-10A (non-tumor, breast) | < 10 pM (limit of detection) | N/A | [ |
| miR-21, miR-96, miR-125b | N/A | Nanosized graphene oxide | 0.05–300 nm (lateral) 1.03 nm (height) | Synthetic miRNA MCF-7, MDA-MB-231 (breast), MDA-MB-435 (melanoma), HeLa (Cervix) | 1 pM (limit of detection) | N/A | [ | |
| let-7b, let-7c, miR-21 | N/A | AuNP | 10 nm | Synthetic miRNA + human serum | < 10 fM (limit of detection) one-base mismatch (selectivity) | N/A | [ | |
| E542K, E545K, methylation of PIK3CA gene | N/A | AuNP | 50 nm | Synthetic ctDNA + human serum | 50 fM (limit of detection) | N/A | [ | |