Login / Signup

NanoClick: A High Throughput, Target-Agnostic Peptide Cell Permeability Assay.

Andrea PeierLan GeNicolas BoyerJohn FrostRuchia DuggalKaustav BiswasScott EdmondsonJeffrey D HermesLin YanChad ZimprichAhmad SadruddinHung Yi Kristal KaanArun ChandramohanChristopher J BrownDawn TheanXue Er LeeTsz Ying YuenFernando J Ferrer-GagoCharles W JohannesDavid P LaneBradley S SherborneCesear CoronaMatthew B RobersTomi K SawyerAnthony W Partridge
Published in: ACS chemical biology (2021)
Macrocyclic peptides open new opportunities to target intracellular protein-protein interactions (PPIs) that are often considered nondruggable by traditional small molecules. However, engineering sufficient membrane permeability into these molecules is a central challenge for identifying clinical candidates. Currently, there is a lack of high-throughput assays to assess peptide permeability, which limits our capacity to engineer this property into macrocyclic peptides for advancement through drug discovery pipelines. Accordingly, we developed a high throughput and target-agnostic cell permeability assay that measures the relative cumulative cytosolic exposure of a peptide in a concentration-dependent manner. The assay was named NanoClick as it combines in-cell Click chemistry with an intracellular NanoBRET signal. We validated the approach using known cell penetrating peptides and further demonstrated a correlation to cellular activity using a p53/MDM2 model system. With minimal change to the peptide sequence, NanoClick enables the ability to measure uptake of molecules that enter the cell via different mechanisms such as endocytosis, membrane translocation, or passive permeability. Overall, the NanoClick assay can serve as a screening tool to uncover predictive design rules to guide structure-activity-permeability relationships in the optimization of functionally active molecules.
Keyphrases
  • high throughput
  • single cell
  • cell therapy
  • drug discovery
  • endothelial cells
  • stem cells
  • amino acid
  • reactive oxygen species