In Situ Self-Assembly of Bispecific Peptide for Cancer Immunotherapy.
Man-Di WangGan-Tian LvHong-Wei AnNi-Yuan ZhangHao WangPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
Precise and effective manipulation of protein functions still faces tremendous challenges. Herein we report a programmable peptide molecule, consisted of targeting and self-assembly modules, that enables specific and highly efficient assembly governed by targeting receptor proteins. Upon binding to the cell membrane receptor, peptide conformation is somewhat stabilized along with decreased self-assembly activation energy, promoting peptide-protein complex oligomerization. We first design a GNNQQNY-RGD peptide (G7-RGD) to recognize integrin α V β 3 receptor for proof-of-concept study. In the presence of α V β 3 protein, the critical assembly concentration of free G7-RGD decreases from 525 to 33 μM and the resultant G7-RGD cluster drives integrin receptor oligomerization. Finally, a bispecific assembling peptide antiCD3-G7-RGD is rationally designed for cancer immunotherapy, which validates CD3 oligomerization and concomitant T cell activation, leading to T cell-mediated cancer cell cytolysis.