The chimeric peptide HPRP-A1-iRGD,
composed of a chemically conjugated
tumor-homing/penetration domain (iRGD) and a cationic anticancer peptide
domain (HPRP-A1), was used to study the effect of targeted modification
to enhance the peptide’s specificity, penetration, and tumor
accumulation ability. The iRGD domain exhibits tumor-targeting and
tumor-penetrating activities by specifically binding to the neuropilin-1
receptor. Acting as a homing/penetration domain, iRGD contributed
to enhancing the tumor selectivity, permeability, and targeting of
HPRP-A1 by targeted receptor dependence. As the anticancer active
domain, HPRP-A1 kills cancer cells by disrupting the cell membrane
and inducing apoptosis. The in vitro membrane selectivity
toward cancer cells, such as A549 and MDA-MB-23, and human umbilical
vein endothelial cells (HUVECs), normal cells, the penetrability assessment
in the A549 3D multiple cell sphere model, and the in vivo tumor-tissue accumulation test in the A549 xenograft model indicated
that HPRP-A1-iRGD exhibited significant increases in the selectivity
toward membranes that highly express NRP-1, the penetration distance
in 3D multiple cell spheres, and the accumulation in tumor tissues
after intravenous injection, compared with HPRP-A1 alone. The mechanism
of the enhanced targeting ability of HPRP-A1-iRGD was demonstrated
by the pull-down assay and biolayer interferometry test, which indicated
that the chimeric peptide could specifically bind to the neuropilin-1
protein with high affinity. We believe that chemical conjugation with
iRGD to increase the specificity, penetration, and tumor-tissue accumulation
of HPRP-A1 is an effective and promising approach for the targeted
modification of peptides as anticancer therapeutics