Short Peptide Motifs for Long-Lasting Anchoring to
the Cell Surface
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Abstract
A rational design strategy has been
developed for the construction
of stable peptide-based anchors for the efficient modification of
cell surfaces. Six types of peptide composed of five residues with
divalent hydrophobic groups have been designed using this new strategy.
Among them, a peptide with a sequence of NBD-Lys-Lys(X)-Lys-Lys-Lys(X)-NH<sub>2</sub> (NBD: fluorophore, Lys(X): <i>N</i>-ε-palmitoyl-l-lysine) was found to show the highest modification efficacy
and longevity in culture medium. The good performance of this peptide
was attributed to (1) its high aqueous solubility, which allowed it
to partition from the medium to the cell surface, and (2) the high
binding affinity of the saturated palmitoyl groups to the cell membrane.
We found that the distribution of the peptide was affected by recycling
endosome, which enabled the representation of the peptide following
its endocytotic disappearance from the cell membrane. Biotin was also
presented on the cell surface using this peptide-based anchor to examine
its recognition by streptavidin. The efficacy of the recognition process
increased as the length of the oligoethylene glycol spacer increased,
indicating that it was necessary for the biotin tag to move away from
the membrane glycoproteins on the cell surface to facilitate its efficient
recognition by streptavidin