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Cell-Penetrating D-Peptides Retain Antisense Morpholino Oligomer Delivery Activity

Authors: 
Schissel CK, Farquhar CE, Malmberg AB, Loas A, Pentelute BL
Citation: 
bioRxiv. 2021;[preprint] doi:10.1101/2021.09.30.462617
Abstract: 
Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) can cross the cell membrane to enter the cytosol and deliver otherwise non-penetrant macromolecules such as proteins and oligonucleotides. For example, recent clinical trials have shown that a CPP attached to phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers (PMO) resulted in higher muscle concentration, increased exon-skipping and dystrophin production relative to another study of the PMO alone in patients of Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Therefore, effective design and study of CPPs could help enhance therapies for difficult-to-treat diseases. So far, the study of CPPs for PMO delivery has been restricted to predominantly canonical L-peptides. We hypothesized that mirror-image D-peptides could have similar PMO delivery activity as well as enhanced proteolytic stability, facilitating their characterization and quantification from biological milieu. We found that several enantiomeric peptide sequences could deliver a PMO-biotin cargo with similar activities, while remaining stable against serum proteolysis. The biotin label allowed for affinity capture of fully intact PMO-peptide conjugates from whole cell and cytosolic lysates. By profiling a mixture of these constructs in cells, we determined their relative intracellular concentrations. When combined with PMO activity, these concentrations provide a new metric for delivery efficiency which may be useful for determining which peptide sequence to pursue in further pre-clinical studies.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
cell culture: HeLa 654
Delivery Method: 
peptide-linked