23 research outputs found

    pH-dependent interactions of coacervate-forming histidine-rich peptide with model lipid membranes

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    Peptide-based liquid droplets (coacervates) produced by spontaneous liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS), have emerged as a promising class of drug delivery systems due to their high entrapping efficiency and the simplicity of their formulation. However, the detailed mechanisms governing their interaction with cell membranes and cellular uptake remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the interactions of peptide coacervates composed of HBpep—peptide derived from the histidine-rich beak proteins (HBPs) of the Humboldt squid—with model cellular membranes in the form of supported lipid bilayers (SLBs). We employed quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D), neutron reflectometry (NR) and atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to reveal the nature of these interactions in the absence of fluorescent labels or tags. HBpep forms small oligomers at pH 6 whereas it forms µm-sized coacervates at physiological pH. Our findings reveal that both HBpep oligomers and HBpep-coacervates adsorb onto SLBs at pH 6 and 7.4, respectively. At pH 6, when the peptide carries a net positive charge, HBpep oligomers insert into the SLB, facilitated by the peptide’s interactions with the charged lipids and cholesterol. Importantly, however, HBpep coacervate adsorption at physiological pH, when it is largely uncharged, is fully reversible, suggesting no significant lipid bilayer rearrangement. HBpep coacervates, previously identified as efficient drug delivery vehicles, do not interact with the lipid membrane in the same manner as traditional cationic drug delivery systems or cell-penetrating peptides. Based on our findings, HBpep coacervates at physiological pH cannot cross the cell membrane by a simple passive mechanism and are thus likely to adopt a non-canonical cell entry pathway

    Peptide nanovesicles: supramolecular assembly of branched amphiphilic peptides

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    Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of BiochemistryJohn M. TomichPeptide-based delivery systems show great potential as safer drug delivery vehicles. They overcome problems associated with lipid-based or viral delivery systems, vis-a-vis stability, specificity, inflammation, antigenicity, and tune-ability. We have designed and synthesized a set of 15 and 23-residue branched, amphiphilic peptides that mimic phosphoglycerides in molecular architecture. They undergo supramolecular self-assembly and form solvent-filled, bilayer delineated spheres with 50-150 nm diameters (confirmed by TEM and DLS). Whereas weak hydrophobic forces drive and sustain lipid bilayer assemblies, these structures are further stabilized by β-sheet hydrogen bonding and are stable at very low concentrations and even in the presence of SDS, urea and trypsin as confirmed by circular dichroism spectroscopy. Given sufficient time, they fuse together to form larger assemblies and trap compounds of different sizes within the enclosed space. They are prepared using a protocol that is similar to preparing lipid vesicles. We have shown that different concentrations of the fluorescent dye, 5(6)-Carboxyfluorescein can be encapsulated in these assemblies and delivered into human lens epithelial cells and MCF-7 cells grown on coverslips. Besides fluorescent dyes, we have delivered the plasmid (EGFP-N3, 4.7kb) into N/N 1003A lens epithelial cells and observed expression of EGFP (in the presence and absence of a selection media). In the case of large molecules like DNA, these assemblies act as nanoparticles and offer some protection to DNA against certain nucleases. Linear peptides that lacked a branching point and other branched peptides with their sequences randomized did not show any of the lipid-like properties exhibited by the branched peptides. The peptides can be chemically decorated with target specific sequences for use as DDS for targeted delivery

    Phase-separating peptides recruiting aggregation-induced emission fluorogen for rapid E. coli detection

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    Rationally designed biomolecular condensates have found applications primarily as drug-delivery systems, thanks to their ability to self-assemble under physico-chemical triggers (such as temperature, pH, or ionic strength) and to concomitantly trap client molecules with exceptionally high efficiency (>99%). However, their potential in (bio)sensing applications remains unexplored. Here, we describe a simple and rapid assay to detect E. coli by combining phase-separating peptide condensates containing a protease recognition site, within which an aggregation-induced emission (AIE)-fluorogen is recruited. The recruited AIE-fluorogen’s fluorescence is easily detected with the naked eye when the samples are viewed under UV-A light. In the presence of E. coli, the bacteria’s outer membrane protease (OmpT) cleaves the phase-separating peptides at the encoded protease recognition site, resulting in two shorter peptide fragments incapable of liquid-liquid phase separation. As a result, no condensates are formed and the fluorogen remains non-fluorescent. The assay feasibility was first tested with recombinant OmpT reconstituted in detergent micelles and subsequently confirmed with E. coli K-12. In its current format, the assay can detect E. coli K-12 (10^8 CFU) within 2 h in spiked water samples and 1-10 CFU/mL with the addition of a 6-7 h pre-culture step. In comparison, most commercially available E. coli detection kits can take anywhere from 8 to 24 h to report their results. Optimizing the peptides for OmpT’s catalytic activity can significantly improve the detection limit and assay time. Besides detecting E. coli, the assay can be adapted to detect other Gram-negative bacteria as well as proteases having diagnostic relevance.Ministry of Education (MOE)Submitted/Accepted versionThis research was funded by the Ministry of Education (MOE), Singapore, through an Academic Research Fund (AcRF) Tier 3 grant (GrantNo. MOE2019-T3-1-012)

    Peptide nanovesicles formed by the self-assembly of branched amphiphilic peptides

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    Citation: Gudlur S, Sukthankar P, Gao J, Avila LA, Hiromasa Y, Chen J, et al. (2012) Peptide Nanovesicles Formed by the Self-Assembly of Branched Amphiphilic Peptides. PLoS ONE 7(9): e45374. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0045374Peptide-based packaging systems show great potential as safer drug delivery systems. They overcome problems associated with lipid-based or viral delivery systems, vis-a-vis stability, specificity, inflammation, antigenicity, and tune-ability. Here, we describe a set of 15 & 23-residue branched, amphiphilic peptides that mimic phosphoglycerides in molecular architecture. These peptides undergo supramolecular self-assembly and form solvent-filled, bilayer delimited spheres with 50–200 nm diameters as confirmed by TEM, STEM and DLS. Whereas weak hydrophobic forces drive and sustain lipid bilayer assemblies, these all-peptide structures are stabilized potentially by both hydrophobic interactions and hydrogen bonds and remain intact at low micromolar concentrations and higher temperatures. A linear peptide lacking the branch point showed no self-assembly properties. We have observed that these peptide vesicles can trap fluorescent dye molecules within their interior and are taken up by N/N 1003A rabbit lens epithelial cells grown in culture. These assemblies are thus potential drug delivery systems that can overcome some of the key limitations of the current packaging systems

    Liposomes as nanoreactors for the photochemical synthesis of gold nanoparticles

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    A simple and novel method for the photochemical synthesis of AuNPs in liposomes is described. Gold salt is co-encapsulated with the photoinitiator Irgacure-2959 in POPC liposomes prepared via traditional thin-film hydration technique. UVA irradiation for 15 min results in encapsulated AuNPs of 2.8 +/- 1.6 nm in diameter that are primarily dispersed in the aqueous interior of the liposomes. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Funding Agencies|Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF); Center for Integrative Regenerative Medicine (IGEN) at Linkoping University</p

    A cluster of aspartic residues in the extracellular loop II of PAR 4 is important for thrombin interaction and activation of platelets

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    Thrombin activates platelets via proteolytic cleavage of protease-activated receptors (PARs) 1 and 4. The two PARs have distinct but complementary roles. The mechanisms responsible for PAR1 activation by thrombin have been extensively studied. However, much less is known regarding thrombin activation of PAR4, especially the potential involvement of regions of PAR4 other than the N-terminal, which is bound to the catalytic site of thrombin. We have studied PAR4 in S. cerevisiae strainMMY12, an expression system in which the GPCR receptors are connected to a Lac Z reporter gene resulting in increased beta-galactosidase activity. This approach was used to assess PAR4 mutants to evaluate the contribution of different aspartic residues in facilitating PAR4 activation. Furthermore, peptides mimicking parts of the PAR4 N-terminal and the second extracellular loop (ECLII) were tested for their ability to inhibit platelet activation by thrombin. Binding of these peptides to gamma-thrombin was studied by monitoring the decrease in tryptophan fluorescence intensity of thrombin. We conclude that not only the N-terminal but also the electronegative aspartic residues D224, D230 and D235 (located in ECLII) are be important for PAR4 binding to thrombin. We further suggest that they play a role for the tethered ligand binding to the receptor, as mutations also affected activation in response to a PAR4-activating peptide mimicking the new N-terminal formed after cleavage. This agrees with previous results on PAR1 and thrombin binding. We suggest that the ECLII of PAR4 could be a potential target for antithrombotic drug development. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Funding Agencies|Swedish Research Council [K2013-65x-15060-10-3]; Swedish Heart-Lung foundation [2014-0410]</p

    Role of Lipopolysaccharide in protecting OmpT from autoproteolysis during in vitro refolding

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    Outer membrane protease (OmpT) is a 33.5 kDa aspartyl protease that cleaves at dibasic sites and is thought to function as a defense mechanism for E. coli against cationic antimicrobial peptides secreted by the host immune system. Despite carrying three dibasic sites in its own sequence, there is no report of OmpT autoproteolysis in vivo. However, recombinant OmpT expressed in vitro as inclusion bodies has been reported to undergo autoproteolysis during the refolding step, thus resulting in an inactive protease. In this study, we monitor and compare levels of in vitro autoproteolysis of folded and unfolded OmpT and examine the role of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in autoproteolysis. SDS-PAGE data indicate that it is only the unfolded OmpT that undergoes autoproteolysis while the folded OmpT remains protected and resistant to autoproteolysis. This selective susceptibility to autoproteolysis is intriguing. Previous studies suggest that LPS, a co-factor necessary for OmpT activity, may play a protective role in preventing autoproteolysis. However, data presented here confirm that LPS plays no such protective role in the case of unfolded OmpT. Furthermore, OmpT mutants designed to prevent LPS from binding to its putative LPS-binding motif still exhibited excellent protease activity, suggesting that the putative LPS-binding motif is of less importance for OmpT’s activity than previously proposed.Ministry of Education (MOE)Published versionThis research work was funded by the Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 2 (MOE2018-T2-1-025) and the NTU-NU Institute for NanoMedicine located at the International Institute for Nanotechnology, Northwestern University, USA and the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore; Agmt10/20/14. KJM was supported by NIH/NCI training grant 5T32CA186897-02. This work made use of the IMSERC at Northwestern University, which has received support from the Soft and Hybrid Nanotechnology Experimental (SHyNE) Resource (NSF NNCI-1542205); the State of Illinois and International Institute for Nanotechnology (IIN). This research was carried out in collaboration with the National Resource for Translational and Developmental Proteomics under Grant P41 GM108569 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institutes of Health

    Cationic Liposomes Enable Shape Control in Surfactant-Free Synthesis of Biocompatible Gold Nanorods

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    Shape-directing agents that promote anisotropic growth are frequently employed in the synthesis of gold nanorods (GNRs), a typical example of which is the surfactant cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB). Owing to their cytotoxicity, surfactant-passivated GNRs have little use in biological applications unless made biocompatible via additional downstream processing. Reported herein is the first instance of liposome-directed anisotropic growth of GNRs synthesized in the absence of surfactants. The as-synthesized phospholipid-passivated GNRs are readily biocompatible. Among the phospholipids tested, only liposomes prepared from 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-ethylphosphocholine (DOEPC) - a cationic transfection agent employed in lipid-mediated gene transfer in vitro - were capable of exerting shape control. By modifying a previously reported photochemical synthesis method, we developed a one-pot, seedless, DOEPC-mediated thermochemical synthesis method that yielded GNRs with an average size of 80-100 nm and an average aspect ratio of ∼3.5 and whose tips shape transformed from smooth to sharp during the course of the synthesis. Further characterization of the as-synthesized phospholipid-passivated GNRs confirmed its stability, excellent biocompatibility, photothermal transduction ability, and application in plasmonic photothermal therapy which was validated via GNR-mediated photothermal ablation of cancer cells in vitro, thus making this route of synthesis attractive for biological applications.Ministry of Education (MOE)Accepted versionThis work was funded by the NTU-NU Institute for NanoMedicine located at the International Institute for Nanotechnology, Northwestern University, USA and the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore; Agmt10/20/14 and by the Ministry of Education, Singapore, under its MOE AcRF Tier 2 Award MOE2018-T2-1-025. This work was also supported by a grant from the Department of Biotechnology (BT/HRD/NBA/38/05/2018) awarded to R.S

    Outer‐Membrane Protease (OmpT) Based E. coli

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    E. coli and Salmonella are two of the most common bacterial pathogens involved in food- and water-borne-related deaths. Hence, it is critical to develop rapid and sensitive detection strategies for near-outbreak applications. Reported is a simple and specific assay to detect as low as 1 CFUmL1 of E. coli in water within 6 hours by targeting the bacterias surface protease activity. The assay relies on polythiophene acetic acid (PTAA) as an optical reporter and a short unlabeled peptide (LL37FRRV) previously optimized as a substrate for OmpT, an outer-membrane protease on E. coli. LL37FRRV interacts with PTAA to enhance its fluorescence while also inducing the formation of a helical PTAA-LL37FRRV construct, as confirmed by circular dichroism. However, in the presence of E. coli LL37FRRV is cleaved and can no longer affect the conformations and optical properties of PTAA. This ability to distinguish between an intact and cleaved peptide was investigated in detail using LL37FRRV sequence variants.Ministry of Education (MOE)Accepted versionThis work was funded by the Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 2 (MOE2018-T2-1-025) and the NTU-NU Institute for NanoMedicine located at the International Institute for Nanotechnology, Northwestern University, USA and the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore; Agmt10/20/14
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