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Chimeras of Cell-Penetrating Peptides Demonstrate Synergistic Improvement in Antisense Efficacy

Authors: 
Fadzen CM, Holden R, Wolfe JM, Choo Z-N, Schissel CK, Yao M, Hanson GJ, Pentelute BL
Citation: 
Biochemistry. 2019;[Epub ahead of print] doi:10.1021/acs.biochem.9b00413
Abstract: 
Phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligonucleotides (PMOs) are a promising class of therapeutics for genetic disease. PMOs designed for “exon skipping” must be internalized into cells, reach the nucleus, and act on pre-mRNA to mediate their effects. One tactic for improving PMO delivery and exon skipping is to covalently conjugate PMOs to cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs). Here we report the synthesis of PMOs conjugated to CPP chimeras, constructed by combining multiple CPPs into one sequence. The chimeric CPPs synergistically improve PMO activity up to 70-fold over the PMO alone, beyond the expected effects of each component peptide. By investigating the design space of CPP chimeras, we demonstrate that all components must be covalently attached, that the order of the two sequences matters, and that peptide identity can tune activity. We identified one chimera (pVEC-Bpep) to investigate in more detail and found that it engages different mechanisms of endocytosis than its parent peptides. We also examined the extent to which the beneficial effect comes from improved cellular uptake as opposed to the downstream steps required for exon skipping. Given the complexity of intracellular delivery, we anticipate this work will lead researchers to consider combining molecules with different physicochemical properties in order to aid in the delivery of biologic cargoes.
Epub: 
Yes
Organism or Cell Type: 
cell culture: HeLa-654
Delivery Method: 
peptide-linked