Human kinases are recognized as one of the most important drug targets associated with cancer. There are >80 FDA-approved kinase inhibitors to date, most of which work by inhibiting ATP binding to the kinase. However, the frequent development of single-point mutations within the kinase domain has made overcoming drug resistance a major challenge in drug discovery today.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTranspeptidases are powerful tools for protein engineering but are largely restricted to acting at protein backbone termini. Alternative enzymatic approaches for internal protein labelling require bulky recognition motifs or non-proteinogenic reaction partners, potentially restricting which proteins can be modified or the types of modification that can be installed. Here we report a strategy for labelling lysine side chain ε-amines by repurposing an engineered asparaginyl ligase, which naturally catalyses peptide head-to-tail cyclization, for versatile isopeptide ligations that are compatible with peptidic substrates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclotides are cysteine-rich plant-derived peptides composed of 28-37 amino acids with a head-to-tail cyclic backbone and a knotted arrangement of three conserved disulfide bonds. Their beneficial biophysical properties make them promising molecules for pharmaceutical and agricultural applications. The Violaceae plant family is the major cyclotide-producing family, and to date, every examined plant from this family has been found to contain cyclotides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals are influenced by the season, yet we know little about the changes that occur in most species throughout the year. This is particularly true in tropical marine animals that experience relatively small annual temperature and daylight changes. Like many coral reef inhabitants, the crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS), well known as a notorious consumer of corals and destroyer of coral reefs, reproduces exclusively in the summer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclotides are cyclic peptides that are promising scaffolds for the design of drug candidates and chemical tools. However, despite there being hundreds of reported cyclotides, drug design studies have commonly focussed on a select few prototypic examples. Here, we explored whether ancestral sequence reconstruction could be used to generate new cyclotides for further optimization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclotides are plant-derived peptides characterized by a head-to-tail cyclic backbone and a cystine knot motif comprised of three disulfide bonds. Formation of this motif via in vitro oxidative folding can be challenging and can result in misfolded isomers with nonnative disulfide connectivities. Here, we investigated the effect of β-turn nucleation on cyclotide oxidative folding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclotides are plant-derived disulfide-rich cyclic peptides that have a natural function in plant defense and potential for use as agricultural pesticides. Because of their highly constrained topology, they are highly resistant to thermal, chemical, or enzymatic degradation. However, the stability of cyclotides at alkaline pH for incubation times of longer than a few days is poorly studied but important since these conditions could be encountered in the environment, during storage or field application as insecticides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeptides are promising drug modalities that can modulate protein-protein interactions, but their application is hampered by their limited ability to reach intracellular targets. Here, we improved the cytosolic delivery of a peptide blocking p53:MDM2/X interactions using a cyclotide as a stabilizing scaffold. We applied several design strategies to improve intracellular delivery and found that the conjugation of the lead cyclotide to the cyclic cell-penetrating peptide cR10 was the most effective.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacteriocins are a large family of bacterial peptides that have antimicrobial activity and potential applications as clinical antibiotics or food preservatives. Circular bacteriocins are a unique class of these biomolecules distinguished by a seamless circular topology, and are widely assumed to be ultra-stable based on this constraining structural feature. However, without quantitative studies of their susceptibility to defined thermal, chemical, and enzymatic conditions, their stability characteristics remain poorly understood, limiting their translational development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMarine animals in the wild are often difficult to access, so they are studied in captivity. However, the implicit assumption that physiological processes of animals in artificial environments are not different from those in the wild has rarely been tested. Here, we investigate the extent to which an animal is impacted by captivity by comparing global gene expression in wild and captive crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Many echinoderms form seasonal aggregations prior to spawning. In some fecund species, a spawning event can lead to population outbreaks with detrimental ecosystem impacts. For instance, outbreaks of crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS), a corallivore, can destroy coral reefs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOptimization of peptide stability is essential for the development of peptides as bona fide alternatives to approved monoclonal antibodies. This is clearly the case for the many peptides reported to antagonize proprotein convertase subtilisin-like/kexin type 9 (PCSK9), a clinically validated target for lowering cholesterol. However, the effects of optimization of stability on in vivo activity and particularly the effects of binding to albumin, an emerging drug design paradigm, have not been studied for such peptide leads.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclotides have a wide range of bioactivities relevant for agricultural and pharmaceutical applications. This large family of naturally occurring macrocyclic peptides is divided into three subfamilies, with the bracelet subfamily being the largest and comprising the most potent cyclotides reported to date. However, attempts to harness the natural bioactivities of bracelet cyclotides and engineer-optimized analogs have been hindered by a lack of understanding of the structural and functional role of their constituent residues, which has been challenging because bracelet cyclotides are difficult to produce synthetically.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeptides have potential to be developed into immune checkpoint inhibitors, but the target interfaces are difficult to inhibit. Here, we explored an approach to mimic the binding surface of PD-1 to design inhibitors. Mimicking native PD-1 resulted in a mimetic with no activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclotides have attracted great interest as drug design scaffolds because of their unique cyclic cystine knotted topology. They are classified into three subfamilies, among which the bracelet subfamily represents the majority and comprises the most bioactive cyclotides, but are the most poorly utilized in drug design applications. A long-standing challenge has been the very low in vitro folding yields of bracelets, hampering efforts to characterize their structures and activities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) is a clinically validated target for treating cardiovascular disease (CVD) due to its involvement in cholesterol metabolism. Although approved monoclonal antibodies (alirocumab and evolocumab) that inhibit PCSK9 function are very effective in lowering cholesterol, their limitations, including high treatment costs, have so far prohibited widespread use. Accordingly, there is great interest in alternative drug modalities to antibodies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInhibiting the Nrf2:Keap1 interaction to trigger cytoprotective gene expression is a promising treatment strategy for oxidative stress-related diseases. A short linear motif from Nrf2 has the potential to directly inhibit this protein-protein interaction, but poor stability and limited cellular uptake impede its therapeutic development. To address these limitations, we utilized an integrated molecular grafting strategy to re-engineer the Nrf2 motif.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) is a clinically validated target for treating hypercholesterolemia. Peptide-based PCSK9 inhibitors have attracted pharmaceutical interest, but the effect of multivalency on bioactivity is poorly understood. Here we designed bivalent and tetravalent dendrimers, decorated with the PCSK9 inhibitory peptides Pep2-8[RRG] or P9-38, to study relationships between peptide binding affinity, peptide valency, and PCSK9 inhibition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecular grafting is a strategy for the engineering of molecular scaffolds into new functional agents, such as next-generation therapeutics. Despite its wide use, studies so far have focused almost exclusively on demonstrating its utility rather than understanding the factors that lead to either poor or successful grafting outcomes. Here, we examine protein evolution and identify parallels between the natural process of protein functional diversification and the artificial process of molecular grafting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclic disulfide-rich peptides have attracted significant interest in drug development and biotechnology. Here, we describe a protocol for producing cyclic peptide precursors in Pichia pastoris that undergo in vitro enzymatic maturation into cyclic peptides using recombinant asparaginyl endopeptidases (AEPs). Peptide precursors are expressed with a C-terminal His tag and secreted into the media, enabling facile purification by immobilized metal affinity chromatography.
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