Login / Signup

Human CD47-Derived Cyclic Peptides Enhance Engulfment of mAb-Targeted Melanoma by Primary Macrophages.

AbdelAziz R JalilJason C AndrechakBrandon H HayesDavid M ChenowethDennis E Discher
Published in: Bioconjugate chemistry (2022)
CD47 on healthy cells, cancer cells, and even engineered particles can inhibit phagocytic clearance by binding SIRPα on macrophages. To mimic and modulate this interaction with peptides that could be used as soluble antagonists or potentially as bioconjugates to surfaces, we made cyclic "nano-Self" peptides based on the key interaction loop of human CD47. Melanoma cells were studied as a standard preclinical cancer model and were antibody-opsonized to adhere to and activate engulfment by primary mouse macrophages. Phagocytosis in the presence of soluble peptides showed cyclic > wildtype > scrambled activity, with the same trend observed with human cells. Opsonized cells that were not engulfed adhered tightly to macrophages, with opposite trends to phagocytosis. Peptide activity is nonetheless higher in human versus mouse assays, consistent with species differences in CD47-SIRPα. Small peptides thus function as soluble antagonists of a major macrophage checkpoint.
Keyphrases