In previous papers, we observed that dendrimers of peptide mimotopes of the nicotinic receptor ligand site are strong antidotes against the lethality of the nicotinic receptor ligand ␣-bungarotoxin. Although their in vitro activity is identical to that of dendrimers, the corresponding monomeric peptide mimotopes are not effective in vivo. Because the higher in vivo efficiency of dendrimers could not in this case be related to polyvalent interaction, the stability to blood protease activity of monomeric versus tetrabranched dendrimeric mimotope peptides was compared here by incubating three different mimotopes with human plasma and serum. Unmodified peptides and cleaved sequences were followed by high pressure liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. Tetrabranched peptides were shown to be much more stable in plasma and also in serum. To assess the notable stability of multimeric peptides, different bioactive neuropeptides, including enkephalins, neurotensin and nociceptin, were synthesized in monomeric and tetrabranched forms and incubated with human plasma and serum and with rat brain membrane extracts. All the tetrabranched neuropeptides fully retained biological activity and generally showed much greater stability to blood and brain protease activity. Some tetrabranched peptides were also resistant to trypsin and chymotrypsin. Our findings provide new insights into the possible therapeutic use of bioactive peptides.Hundreds of peptides with potential therapeutic activities have been identified. These include naturally occurring peptide hormones and neurotransmitters, which influence and control series of vital functions, such as cell proliferation, tissue development, metabolism, immune defense, perception of pain, reproduction, behavior, and blood pressure. Selective agonists or antagonists of these natural peptides are extremely useful for the investigation of peptidergic systems and are also potential therapeutic agents (1). Moreover, several peptide fragments or mimotopes derived from potential therapeutic proteins show promising biological activity (2).However, the use of peptides as therapeutic drugs has largely been limited by their short half-life in vivo. Because peptides are mainly broken down by proteases and peptidases, peptide delivery is the bottleneck in the development of new peptide drugs. To increase peptide half-life, many strategies involving different levels of chemical modification are possible (3, 4). The introduction of D-amino acids, or pseudo amino acids, and peptide cyclization are the most common strategies to increase peptide stability. However, these modifications may profoundly alter peptide activity. Alternatively, peptidomimetic molecules can be developed by the synthesis of conformationally restricted compounds, in which the peptide is locally or globally constrained in order to reproduce the active conformation. The resulting structures are mostly non-peptide molecules, more resistant to degrading enzymes.In general, peptide molecules have the advantage of good specifici...
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Peptides derived from the sequence of a single-chain, recombinant, antiidiotypic antibody (IdAb; KT-scFv) acting as a functional internal image of a microbicidal, wide-spectrum yeast killer toxin (KT) were synthesized and studied for their antimicrobial activity by using the KT-susceptible Candida albicans as model organism. A decapeptide containing the first three amino acids (SAS) of the light chain CDR1 was selected and optimized by alanine replacement of a single residue. This peptide exerted a strong candidacidal activity in vitro, with a 50% inhibitory concentration of 0.056 M, and was therefore designated killer peptide (KP). Its activity was neutralized by laminarin, a 1-3 glucan molecule, but not by pustulan, a 1-6 glucan molecule. KP also competed with the binding of a KT-like monoclonal IdAb to germinating cells of the fungus. In a rat model of vaginal candidiasis, local, postchallenge administration of KP was efficacious in rapidly abating infections caused by fluconazole-susceptible or -resistant C. albicans strains. In systemic infection of BALB/c or SCID mice preinfected intravenously with a lethal fungal load, KP caused a highly significant prolongation of the median survival time, with >80% of the animals still surviving after >60 days, whereas >90% of control mice died within 3 to 5 days. KP is therefore the first engineered peptide derived from a recombinant IdAb retaining KT microbicidal activity, probably through the interaction with the -glucan KT receptor on target microbial cells.
GNA 1870 is a novel surface-exposed lipoprotein, identified by genome analysis of Neisseria meningitidis strain MC58, which induces bactericidal antibodies. Three sequence variants of the protein were shown to be sufficient to induce bactericidal antibodies against a panel of strains representative of the diversity of serogroup B meningococci. Here, we studied the antigenic and immunogenic properties of GNA 1870, which for convenience was divided into domains A, B, and C. The immune responses of mice immunized with each of the three variants were tested using overlapping peptides scanning the entire protein length and using recombinant fragments. We found that while most of the linear epitopes are located in the A domain, the bactericidal antibodies are directed against conformational epitopes located in the BC domain. This was also confirmed by the isolation of a bactericidal murine monoclonal antibody, which failed to recognize linear peptides on the A, B, and C domains separately but recognized a conformational epitope formed only by the combination of the B and C domains. Arginine in position 204 was identified as important for binding of the monoclonal antibody. The identification of the region containing bactericidal epitopes is an important step in the design of new vaccines against meningococci.
Human monoclonal antibodies are promising agents for the development of more selective anticancer therapeutics. However, the tumor-targeting efficiency of most anticancer antibodies is severely limited by their poor penetration into the tumor mass. Recent studies have shown that a peptide derived from the HIV TAT protein could improve the distribution of cytoplasmic reporter proteins when administered systemically as fusion proteins or cross-linked chimeras. In this article, we tested by quantitative biodistribtution analysis whether conjugation to TAT peptides could improve the tumor targeting properties of scFv(L19)-Cys: an engineered human antibody fragment specific for the ED-B domain of fibronectin, a marker located in the modified extracellular matrix surrounding tumor neovasculature. Our results show that TAT peptides, consisting either of L-amino acids or D-amino acids, can efficiently transduce target cells when conjugated to fluorophores and/or antibody fragments, suggesting a receptor-independent cell entry mechanism. However, conjugation of scFv(L19)-Cys to TAT peptides resulted in a severely reduced tumor targeting performance compared to the unconjugated antibody, as measured in murine F9 teratocarcinoma-bearing mice, after intravenous injection of the radiolabeled antibody preparations. Our results outline the usefulness of TAT peptides for the efficient in vitro transduction of cells with globular proteins. In particular, the use of TAT peptides composed of D-amino acids may significantly reduce proteolytic degradation. At the same time, the poor biodistribution properties of antibody-TAT conjugates cast doubts over the applicability of this methodology for the delivery of biopharmaceuticals in vivo.
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