Although the sequence specificity, biostability, and low toxicity of PMO (phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers) make them good antisense agents to study gene function, their limited ability to cross cell membranes limits their use in cell culture. In this paper we show that conjugation to arginine-rich peptides significantly enhanced the cellular uptake of PMO. The factors that affect the conjugate's cellular uptake and its antisense activity toward a targeted mRNA were investigated. Factors studied include the number of arginines in the peptide, the choice of cross-linker, the peptide conjugation position, the length of the PMO, and the cell culture conditions. Delivery of PMO to the cell nucleus and cytosol required conjugation rather than complexation of peptides to PMO. R(9)F(2)C was best suited to deliver a PMO to its target RNA resulting in the strongest antisense effect. By simply adding the R(9)F(2)C-PMO conjugate into the cell culture medium at low microM concentration, missplicing of pre-mRNA was corrected. This particular peptide-conjugated PMO was more effective than the PMO conjugated to the transmembrane transport peptides of HIV-1 Tat protein, Drosophila antennapedia protein, or to peptides with fewer arginines. Length of PMO did not affect a peptide's delivery efficacy, but all other factors were important. R(9)F(2)C peptide provided a simple and efficient delivery of PMO to a RNA target. Conjugation of peptide to PMO enhances the opportunities to evaluate gene functions in cell cultures.
Cell penetrating peptides (CPPs) have been shown to enhance the cellular uptake of antisense oligonucleotides (AOs). However, the effectiveness of the CPPs for cytoplasmic or nuclear delivery of therapeutic AOs must take into account the possible entrapment of the CPP−AO conjugates in endosomes/lysosomes and the overall stability of the CPP−AO conjugates to enzymes. This includes the stabilities of the CPPs and AOs themselves as well as the linkage between them. In this study, we investigated the effects of several structural features of arginine-rich CPPs on the metabolic stability of CPP conjugated to phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers (PMOs) in human serum and in cells. Those structural features include amino acid configurations (d or l), incorporation of non-α-amino acids, peptide sequences, and types of linkages between CPPs and PMOs. Using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry, we found that the stability of the CPP portion was varied although the PMO portion of the conjugate was completely stable both in cells and in human serum. d-Configuration CPPs were completely stable, while l-CPPs were degraded in both serum and HeLa cells. Insertions of 6-aminohexanoic acid residues (X) into an R8 peptide increased the corresponding CPP's serum stability with the degree of stability being dependent upon the positions of X. However, X-containing CPPs were degraded rapidly intracellularly. Insertions of β-alanines (B) into the R8 peptide increased its serum stability and intracellular stability. An amide or a maleimide linkage was stable in both serum and cells; however, an unhindered disulfide linkage was not stable in either. By using fluorescent microscopy, flow cytometry, and an antisense splice correction assay, the cellular uptakes of an X-containing conjugate and its fragments were compared to their antisense activities. We found that a large fraction of the conjugate was trapped within vesicles and the degraded fragments cannot escape from the vesicles. This study indicates that the incorporation of non-α-amino acids into l-CPPs can increase the metabolic stability of CPP−PMOs without using costly d-CPPs. However, the position and type of non-α-amino acids affect the degree of stability extracellularly and intracellularly. In addition, this study reveals that the degradation of an X-containing CPP−PMO conjugate is a more rapid process than degradation of a B-containing conjugate. Last, the endosomal/lysosomal trapping limits the effectiveness of a CPP−PMO conjugate, and the stability of the CPP is one of the factors affecting the ability of the conjugate to escape the endosomes/lysosomes.
Noncharged antisense compounds, such as phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers (PMOs), do not readily enter mammalian cells in culture. A simple and effective means for cellular delivery of PMOs is through their conjugation to arginine-rich peptides. Understanding the effect of peptide conjugation on the efficacy, toxicity, and specificity of PMOs is important to the successful application of this antisense delivery method. We investigated the effects of conjugation of arginine-rich peptides to PMO on the thermal stability, efficacy and specificity for targeted RNA of the resulting compound. In vitro translation assays showed that (1) R9F2-PMO generated antisense activity 3-25-fold higher than corresponding nonconjugated PMO, (2) the level of antisense activity enhancement by R9F2-PMO over a corresponding nonconjugated PMO is related to the GC content of the PMO sequence, (3) R9F2 conjugation reduced the minimum length of a PMO required to inactivate a target RNA from 20 bases to 14 bases, and (4) nonspecific effects of R9F2-PMO occur at lower concentrations than corresponding PMO alone. Thermal stability of heteroduplexes of PMO and complementary RNA were increased by conjugation of PMO to R9F2 peptide, likely accounting for the increased specific antisense activity of conjugated over nonconjugated PMO. A cell-culture based assay demonstrated that while conjugation to unnatural peptides increased PMO efficacy without causing nonspecificity at concentrations < or = 10 microM, only L-peptide conjugation retained high specificity at higher concentrations. This study demonstrates that conjugation of PMO to an arginine-rich peptide generally increases the binding affinity of the PMO to complementary RNA and increases its antisense potency. Additionally, it is shown that the enzymatic stability of an L- or unnatural peptide used for PMO conjugation affects the antisense properties of the resulting compound.
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