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A pH-Responsive Protein Assembly through Clustering of a Charge-Tunable Single Amino Acid Repeat.

Jin-Ho BaeHak-Sung Kim
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
Specific targeting of tumor cells is a key to achieving high therapeutic efficacy while minimizing off-target side effects. As a general approach to targeting diverse tumor cells, considerable attention has been paid to the tumor microenvironment, particularly its slightly acidic pH (6.5-6.8). However, existing pH-sensitive nanomaterials, based on organic polymers and proteins, often lack sufficient pH sensitivity and specificity. Here, we demonstrate a strategy to construct a pH-responsive protein assembly through clustering of a single amino acid repeat as a charge-tunable moiety. As a proof of concept, a histidine peptide with varying lengths was displayed on the surface of a ferritin assembly composed of 24 subunits by genetic fusion to a subunit. The resulting self-assembled ferritin particles, termed "pHerricle (pH-responsive ferritin particle)", were shown to exhibit a specific binding to tumor cells in response to pH changes through cooperative effects of histidine peptides. Increasing the histidine peptide length from 0 to 12 residues increased the pHerricle's cell-binding capacity by 21-fold and allowed modulation of the targetable pH range. General applicability as a tumor cell-targeting platform was shown by specific delivery of a cytotoxic cargo by the pHerricle into tumor cells of various origins in a pH-dependent manner.
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