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Multi-site esterification: a tunable, reversible strategy to tailor therapeutic peptides for delivery.
Bannon, Mark S; Ellena, Jeffrey F; Gourishankar, Aditi S; Marsh, Spencer R; Trevisan-Silva, Dilza; Sherman, Nicholas E; Jourdan, L Jane; Gourdie, Robert G; Letteri, Rachel A.
Affiliation
  • Bannon MS; Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Virginia Charlottesville VA 22903 USA rl2qm@virginia.edu +1 434 243 3628.
  • Ellena JF; Biomolecular Magnetic Resonance Facility, School of Medicine, University of Virginia Charlottesville VA 22903 USA.
  • Gourishankar AS; Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Virginia Charlottesville VA 22903 USA rl2qm@virginia.edu +1 434 243 3628.
  • Marsh SR; Fralin Biomedical Institute, Virginia Tech Carillion School of Medicine Roanoke VA 24016 USA.
  • Trevisan-Silva D; Biomolecular Analysis Facility, School of Medicine, University of Virginia Charlottesville VA 22903 USA.
  • Sherman NE; Biomolecular Analysis Facility, School of Medicine, University of Virginia Charlottesville VA 22903 USA.
  • Jourdan LJ; Fralin Biomedical Institute, Virginia Tech Carillion School of Medicine Roanoke VA 24016 USA.
  • Gourdie RG; Fralin Biomedical Institute, Virginia Tech Carillion School of Medicine Roanoke VA 24016 USA.
  • Letteri RA; Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Virginia Charlottesville VA 22903 USA rl2qm@virginia.edu +1 434 243 3628.
Mol Syst Des Eng ; 2024 Sep 13.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39281343
ABSTRACT
Peptides are naturally potent and selective therapeutics with massive potential; however, low cell membrane permeability limits their clinical implementation, particularly for hydrophilic, anionic peptides with intracellular targets. To overcome this limitation, esterification of anionic carboxylic acids on therapeutic peptides can simultaneously increase hydrophobicity and net charge to facilitate cell internalization, whereafter installed esters can be cleaved hydrolytically to restore activity. To date, however, most esterified therapeutics contain either a single esterification site or multiple esters randomly incorporated on multiple sites. This investigation provides molecular engineering insight into how the number and position of esters installed onto the therapeutic peptide α carboxyl terminus 11 (αCT11, RPRPDDLEI) with 4 esterification sites affect hydrophobicity and the hydrolysis process that reverts the peptide to its original form. After installing methyl esters onto αCT11 using Fischer esterification, we isolated 5 distinct products and used 2D nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography, and mass spectrometry to determine which residues were esterified in each and the resulting increase in hydrophobicity. We found esterifying the C-terminal isoleucine to impart the largest increase in hydrophobicity. Monitoring ester hydrolysis showed the C-terminal isoleucine ester to be the most hydrolytically stable, followed by the glutamic acid, whereas esters on aspartic acids hydrolyze rapidly. LC-MS revealed the formation of transient intramolecular aspartimides prior to hydrolysis to carboxylic acids. In vitro proof-of-concept experiments showed esterifying αCT11 to increase cell migration into a scratch, highlighting the potential of multi-site esterification as a tunable, reversible strategy to enable the delivery of therapeutic peptides.

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Mol Syst Des Eng Year: 2024 Document type: Article Country of publication: United kingdom

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Mol Syst Des Eng Year: 2024 Document type: Article Country of publication: United kingdom