| Literature DB >> 32304700 |
Zachary R Crook1, Emily Girard1, Gregory P Sevilla1, Morgan Merrill1, Della Friend2, Peter B Rupert2, Fiona Pakiam1, Elizabeth Nguyen1, Chunfeng Yin1, Raymond O Ruff1, Gene Hopping1, Andrew D Strand1, Kathryn A K Finton2, Margo Coxon1, Andrew J Mhyre1, Roland K Strong2, James M Olson3.
Abstract
The impenetrability of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) to most conventional drugs impedes the treatment of central nervous system (CNS) disorders. Interventions for diseases like brain cancer, neurodegeneration, or age-associated inflammatory processes require varied approaches to CNS drug delivery. Cystine-dense peptides (CDPs) have drawn recent interest as drugs or drug-delivery vehicles. Found throughout the phylogenetic tree, often in drug-like roles, their size, stability, and protein interaction capabilities make CDPs an attractive mid-size biologic scaffold to complement conventional antibody-based drugs. Here, we describe the identification, maturation, characterization, and utilization of a CDP that binds to the transferrin receptor (TfR), a native receptor and BBB transporter for the iron chaperone transferrin. We developed variants with varying binding affinities (KD as low as 216 pM), co-crystallized it with the receptor, and confirmed murine cross-reactivity. It accumulates in the mouse CNS at ~25% of blood levels (CNS blood content is only ~1%-6%) and delivers neurotensin, an otherwise non-BBB-penetrant neuropeptide, at levels capable of modulating CREB signaling in the mouse brain. Our work highlights the utility of CDPs as a diverse, easy-to-screen scaffold family worthy of inclusion in modern drug discovery strategies, demonstrated by the discovery of a candidate CNS drug delivery vehicle ready for further optimization and preclinical development.Entities:
Keywords: central nervous system; drug delivery; drug discovery; high-throughput screening; protein therapeutics
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32304700 PMCID: PMC9569163 DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2020.04.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Biol ISSN: 0022-2836 Impact factor: 6.151