For the purpose of achieving gene transfer into cells mediated by peptides with a short chain length, we employed two kinds of amphiphilic alpha-helix peptides, mastoparan (INLK-ALAA-LAKK-IL-NH2) obtained from wasp venom and an alpha-helix model peptide (LARL-LARL-LARL-NH2). Furthermore, to strengthen the hydrophobicity of the peptide required for the formation of the aggregates with the DNA, we modified these peptides using several lipophilic groups, i.e. acyl groups with a single chain, a dialkylcarbamoyl group and a cholesteryloxycarbonyl group. We examined the ability of the peptides and their derivatives to bind and aggregate with plasmid DNA, the structural change in the peptides caused by binding with the DNA and the in vitro gene transfer abilities into COS-7 cells. As a result, mastoparan was found to acquire the DNA binding ability by introduction of the lipophilic group. The conformational change in the peptides depended on the hydrophobicity of the introduced acyl group. The DNA complex of most lipophilic mastoparan derivatives could be incorporated into the cells via the endocytosis pathway. In the case of the helix model peptide, the acyl group with a moderate chain length was required for the formation of the aggregate which is competent for incorporation into the cells. In this study, we succeeded in giving such short peptides sufficient gene transfer ability by modifying them with some lipophilic groups. However, the influence of the modification by the lipophilic groups on the formation of aggregates with DNA and the gene transfer ability depended on the structure of the peptide portion. These results indicate that consideration of total hydrophobicity balance is needed for the design of an efficient gene carrier peptide.
To define the minimal peptide length needed for gene delivery into mammalian cells, we synthesized several peptides with shortened chain lengths from the amino-termini of the original amphiphilic peptides (4(6), Ac-LARL-LARL-LARL-LRAL-LRAL-LRAL-NH( 2,) and Hel 11-7, KLLK-LLLK-LWKK-LLKL-LK), which have been known to have gene transfer abilities into cells. Each synthetic peptide was studied for its ability to bind and aggregate with plasmid DNA and the structural change of the peptide caused by binding with the DNA to establish a relative in vitro gene transfection efficiency in COS-7 cells. As a result, the deletion of eight amino acid residues of 4(6) had little influence on their ability, whereas that of 12 amino acid residues remarkably reduced the abilities to make aggregates and transfer the DNA into the cell. In the case of the Hel 11-7 series peptides, deletion of amino acid residues caused a considerable reduction in abilities to bind and form aggregates with DNA and to transfer the DNA into cell in due order. In summary, 16 and 17 amino acid residues were sufficient to form aggregates with the DNA and transfer the DNA into the cells in the deletion series of 4(6) and Hel 11-7, respectively. Furthermore, it was indicated that reduction of membrane perturbation activity of the peptide-DNA complex due to deletion of the peptide chain length caused suppression of the transfection efficiency even if the complex was incorporated into the cells. Transfer of the complex to cytosol mediated by membrane perturbation activity of the peptide is an important step for efficient protein expression from its cDNA. The results of this study will make it easy to design and synthesize a functional gene carrier molecule such as a carbohydrate-modified peptide used in targeted gene delivery.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.