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Comprehensive Peptide Cyclization Examination Yields Optimized APP Scaffolds with Improved Affinity toward Mint2.

Christian R O BartlingFlora AlexopoulouSarah KuschertYanni K-Y ChinXinying JiaVita SereikaiteDennis ÖzcelikThomas M JensenPalash JainMads M NygaardKasper HarpsøeDavid E GloriamMehdi MobliKristian Strømgaard
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2023)
Peptides targeting disease-relevant protein-protein interactions are an attractive class of therapeutics covering the otherwise undruggable space between small molecules and therapeutic proteins. However, peptides generally suffer from poor metabolic stability and low membrane permeability. Hence, peptide cyclization has become a valuable approach to develop linear peptide motifs into metabolically stable and potentially cell-permeable cyclic leads. Furthermore, cyclization of side chains, also known as "stapling", can stabilize particular secondary peptide structures. Here, we demonstrate that a comprehensive examination of cyclization strategies in terms of position, chemistry, and length is a prerequisite for the selection of optimal cyclic peptide scaffolds. Our systematic approach identifies cyclic APP dodecamer peptides targeting the phosphotyrosine binding domain of Mint2 with substantially improved affinity. We show that especially all-hydrocarbon stapling provides improved metabolic stability, a significantly stabilized secondary structure and membrane permeability.
Keyphrases
  • endothelial cells
  • amino acid
  • cancer therapy
  • genome wide
  • small molecule
  • stem cells
  • tissue engineering
  • dna methylation
  • cell therapy