Peptides for Specifically Targeting Nanoparticles
to Cellular Organelles: <i>Quo Vadis</i>?
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Abstract
ConspectusThe interfacing of nanomaterials and especially
nanoparticles within all aspects of biological research continues
to grow at a nearly unabated pace with projected applications focusing
on powerful new tools for cellular labeling, imaging, and sensing,
theranostic materials, and drug delivery. At the most fundamental
level, many of these nanoparticles are meant to target not only very
specific cell-types, regardless of whether they are in a culture,
tissue, an animal model, or ultimately a patient, but also in many
cases a specific subcellular organelle. During this process, these
materials will undergo a complex journey that must first find the
target cell of interest, then be taken up by those cells across the
extracellular membrane, and ultimately localize to a desired subcellular
organelle, which may include the nucleus, plasma membrane, endolysosomal
system, mitochondria, cytosol, or endoplasmic reticulum. To accomplish
these complex tasks in the correct sequence, researchers are increasingly
interested in selecting for and exploiting targeting peptides that
can impart the requisite capabilities to a given nanoparticle construct.
There are also a number of related criteria that need careful consideration
for this undertaking centering on the nature and properties of the
peptide vector itself, the peptide–nanoparticle conjugate characteristics,
and the target cell.Here, we highlight some important issues
and key research areas related to this burgeoning field. We begin
by providing a brief overview of some criteria for optimal attachment
of peptides to nanoparticles, the predominant methods by which nanoparticles
enter cells, and some of the peptide sequences that have been utilized
to facilitate nanoparticle delivery to cells focusing on those that
engender the initial targeting and uptake. Because almost all materials
delivered to cells by peptides utilize the endosomal system of vesicular
transport and in many cases remain sequestered within the vesicles,
we critically evaluate the issue of endosomal escape in the context
of some recently reported successes in this regard. Following from
this, peptides that have been reported to deliver nanoparticles to
specific subcellular compartments are examined with a focus on what
they delivered and the putative mechanisms by which they were able
to accomplish this. The last section focuses on two areas that are
critical to realizing this overall approach in the long term. The
first is how to select for peptidyl sequences capable of improved
or more specific cellular or subcellular targeting based upon principles
commonly associated with drug discovery. The second looks at what
has been done to create modular peptides that incorporate multiple
desirable functionalities within a single, contiguous sequence. This
provides a viable alternative to either the almost insurmountable
challenge of finding one sequence capable of all functions or, alternatively,
attaching different peptides with different functionalities to the
same nanoparticle in different ratios when trying to orchestrate their
net effects. Finally, we conclude with a brief perspective on the
future evolution and broader impact of this growing area of bionanoscience