| Literature DB >> 31300053 |
Yorick Janssens1, Evelien Wynendaele1, Wim Vanden Berghe2, Bart De Spiegeleer3.
Abstract
Peptides originating from different sources (endogenous, food derived, environmental, and synthetic) are able to influence different aspects of epigenetic regulation. Endogenous short peptides, resulting from proteolytic cleavage of proteins or upon translation of non-annotated out of frame transcripts, can block DNA methylation and hereby regulate gene expression. Peptides entering the body by digestion of food-related proteins can modulate DNA methylation and/or histone acetylation while environmental peptides, synthesized by bacteria, fungi, and marine sponges, mainly inhibit histone deacetylation. In addition, synthetic peptides that reverse or inhibit different epigenetic modifications of both histones and the DNA can be developed as well. Next to these DNA and histone modifications, peptides can also influence the expression of non-coding RNAs such as lncRNAs and the maturation of miRNAs.Seen the advantages over small molecules, the development of peptide therapeutics is an interesting approach to treat diseases with a strong epigenetic basis like cancer and Alzheimer's disease. To date, only a limited number of drugs with a proven epigenetic mechanism of action have been approved by the FDA of which two (romidepsin and nesiritide) are peptides. A large knowledge gap concerning epigenetic effects of peptides is present, and this class of molecules deserves more attention in the development as epigenetic modulators. In addition, none of the currently approved peptide drugs are under investigation for their potential effects on epigenetics, hampering drug repositioning of these peptides to other indications with an epigenetic etiology.Entities:
Keywords: Drug repositioning; Epigenetics; Peptides; Therapeutical development
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31300053 PMCID: PMC6624906 DOI: 10.1186/s13148-019-0700-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epigenetics ISSN: 1868-7075 Impact factor: 6.551
An overview of the effects of peptides on different epigenetic systems
| Epigenetic mechanism | Peptide | Effect | Type | Source | Status | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DNA methylation | Short peptides | Inhibition | Direct | Endogenous/synthetic | Pre-clinical | [ |
| Aβ | Inhibition | Indirect | Endogenous | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| BCM7 | Inhibition | Indirect | Milk | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| GM7 | Inhibition | Indirect | Wheat | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| Histone methylation | HIP | Inhibition | Indirect | Endogenous | Clinical | [ |
| EZH2 antagonists | Inhibition | Direct | Synthetic | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| WHSC1 antagonist | Inhibition | Direct | Synthetic | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| Histone demethylation | LSD1 antagonists | Inhibition | Direct | Synthetic | Pre-clinical | [ |
| Histone acetylation | Lunasin | Inhibition | Direct | Soybean | Clinical | [ |
| Histone deacetylation | Romidepsin | Inhibition | Direct | Bacterial | Approved | [ |
| Burkholdacs | Inhibition | Direct | Bacterial | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| Spiruchostatins | Inhibition | Direct | Bacterial | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| Thailandepsin | Inhibition | Direct | Bacterial | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| FR901375 | Inhibition | Direct | Bacterial | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| Largazole | Inhibition | Direct | Bacterial | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| Plitidepsin | Inhibition | Direct | Tunica | Clinical | [ | |
| Chlamydocin | Inhibition | Direct | Fungal | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| Trapoxins | Inhibition | Direct | Bacterial | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| CHAP | Inhibition | Direct | Synthetic | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| Apicidin | Inhibition | Direct | Bacterial | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| Microsporins | Inhibition | Direct | Fungal | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| Azumamides | Inhibition | Direct | Sponge | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| FR235222 | Inhibition | Direct | Fungal | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| AS1387392 | Inhibition | Direct | Fungal | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| miRNA | LK-L1C/K6W/L8C | miR-29b ↑ | Direct | Synthetic | Pre-clinical | [ |
LKKLLKLLKKWLKLKGX LKKLLKLLKKLWKLKGX | miR-155 ↓ | Direct | Synthetic | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| L50 | miR-21 ↓ | Direct | Synthetic | Pre-clinical | [ | |
| LncRNA | BNP (Nesiritide) | LSINCT5 ↑ | Direct | Endogenous | Approved | [ |
Fig. 1Schematic overview of peptide effects on different epigenetic mechanisms. (a) Short peptides inhibit DNA methylation by blocking DNA methyltransferase binding or initiation of strand separation. (b) BCM7, GM7, and Aβ suppress DNA methylation by inhibiting cysteine uptake and lowering the SAM/SAH ratio in the cell. (c) HIP inhibits histone methylation indirectly by suppressing the FOXO1 transcription factor and subsequent menin binding and histone methyltransferase recruitment. (d) Lunasin blocks H3 and H4 histone acetylations by preventing HAT interaction. (e) Cyclic depsi- and tetrapeptides inhibit histone deacetylases by interaction with zinc atoms in the binding pocket of the enzyme. (f, g) Synthetic peptide antagonists block the interaction sites of the HDM and HMT enzymes. (h) Synthetic peptides either promote or suppress Dicer-mediated maturation of miRNA
Fig. 2Structures of acyldepsipeptides
Fig. 3Structures of cyclic tetrapeptides
FDA-approved drugs with epigenetic effects
| Drugs | Classification | Indicated disease | Approved year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Procainamide | DNMTi | Cardiac arrhythmia | 1950 |
| Hydralazine | DNMTi | Hypertension | 1953 |
| Valproic acid | HDACi | Epilepsy/seizures | 1978 |
| Nesiritide | LncRNA upregulator | Heart failure | 2001 |
| Azacitidine | DNMTi | MDS | 2004 |
| Vorinostat | HDACi | CTCL | 2006 |
| Decitabine | DNMTi | MDS | 2006 |
| Romidepsin | HDACi | CTCL/PTCL | 2009/2011 |
| Ruxolitinib | JAK1/2 inhibitor | Myelofibrosis | 2011 |
| Belinostat | HDACi | PTCL | 2015 |
| Panobinostat | HDACi | MM | 2015 |
MDS myelodysplastic syndrome, CTCL cutaneous T cell lymphoma, PTCL peripheral T cell lymphoma, MM multiple myeloma