Cell-Penetrating Peptides Translocate across the Plasma Membrane by Inducing Vesicle Budding and Collapse.
Ashweta SahniJeremy L RitcheyZiqing QianDehua PeiPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) enter the cell by two different mechanisms-endocytosis followed by endosomal escape and direct translocation at the plasma membrane. The mechanism of direct translocation remains unresolved. In this work, the direct translocation of nonaarginine (R9) and two cyclic CPPs (CPP12 and CPP17) into Jurkat cells was monitored by time-lapse confocal microscopy. Our results provide direct evidence that all three CPPs translocate across the plasma membrane by a recently discovered vesicle budding-and-collapse (VBC) mechanism. Membrane translocation is preceded by the formation of nucleation zones. Up to four different types of nucleation zones and three variations of the VBC mechanism were observed. The VBC mechanism reconciles the enigmatic and conflicting observations in the literature.