Disrupting the interaction between HIF1α and p300 is a promising
strategy to modulate the hypoxia response of tumor cells. Herein,
we designed a constrained peptide inhibitor derived from the CITED2/p300
complex to disturb the HIF1α/p300 interaction. Through truncation/mutation
screening and a terminal aspartic acid-stabilized strategy, a constrained
peptide was constructed with outstanding biochemical/biophysical properties,
especially in binding affinity, cell penetration, and serum stability.
To date, our study was the first one to showcase that stabilized peptides
derived from CITED2 using helix-stabilizing methods acted as a promising
candidate for modulating hypoxia-inducible signaling.
Anti-apoptotic B cell lymphoma 2 (BCL-2) family proteins are proven targets for human cancers. Targeting the BH3-binding pockets of these anti-apoptotic proteins could reactivate apoptosis in BCL-2-depedent cancers. BFL-1 is a BCL-2 family protein overexpressed in various chemoresistant cancers. A unique cysteine at the binding interface of the BH3 and BFL-1 was previously proven to be an intriguing targeting site to irreversibly inhibit BFL-1 functions with stabilized cyclic peptide bearing a covalent warhead. Recently, we developed a sulfonium-tethered peptide cyclization strategy to construct peptide ligands that could selectively and efficiently react with the cysteine(s) of target proteins near the interacting interface. Using this method, we constructed a BFL-1 peptide inhibitor, B4-MC, that could selectively conjugate with BFL-1 both in vitro and in cell. B4-MC showed good cellular uptake, colocalized with BFL-1 on mitochondria, and showed obvious growth inhibition of BFL-1 over-expressed cancer cell lines.
Peptides that induced autophagy at micromolar concentrations with improved proteolytic resistance properties were generated using the facile methionine bis-alkylation method.
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