Publications by authors named "Joakim Swedberg"

Cyclotides are plant-derived peptides with complex structures shaped by their head-to-tail cyclic backbone and cystine knot core. These structural features underpin the native bioactivities of cyclotides, as well as their beneficial properties as pharmaceutical leads, including high proteolytic stability and cell permeability. However, their inherent structural complexity presents a challenge for cyclotide engineering, particularly for accessing libraries of sufficient chemical diversity to design potent and selective cyclotide variants.

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Ruthenium-catalysed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (RuAAC) provides access to 1,5-disubstituted 1,2,3-triazole motifs in peptide engineering applications. However, investigation of this motif as a disulfide mimetic in cyclic peptides has been limited, and the structural consequences remain to be studied. We report synthetic strategies to install various triazole linkages into cyclic peptides through backbone cyclisation and RuAAC cross-linking reactions.

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Chymase is a serine protease that is predominantly expressed by mast cells and has key roles in immune defense and the cardiovascular system. This enzyme has also emerged as a therapeutic target for cardiovascular disease due to its ability to remodel cardiac tissue and generate angiotensin II. Here, we used the nature-derived cyclic peptide sunflower trypsin inhibitor-1 (SFTI-1) as a template for designing novel chymase inhibitors.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Neutrophils release four key serine proteases from azurophilic granules that help fight infections and regulate inflammation, but their unregulated activity can cause harm, making them potential drug targets for diseases like COPD and rheumatoid arthritis.
  • - This study zeroes in on proteinase 3 (PR3), a neutrophil enzyme, and focuses on creating effective inhibitors by modifying a cyclic peptide known as sunflower trypsin inhibitor-1 (SFTI-1).
  • - Researchers employed an optimization strategy to enhance SFTI-1, leading to new inhibitors with impressive effectiveness at very low concentrations and great stability in human serum, paving the way for future drug development.
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The backbone cyclic and disulfide bridged sunflower trypsin inhibitor-1 (SFTI-1) peptide is a proven effective scaffold for a range of peptide therapeutics. For production at laboratory scale, solid phase peptide synthesis techniques are widely used, but these synthetic approaches are costly and environmentally taxing at large scale. Here, we developed a plant-based approach for the recombinant production of SFTI-1-based peptide drugs.

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Sunflower trypsin inhibitor (SFTI-1) is a 14 amino acid serine protease inhibitor. The dual antiparallel β-sheet arrangement of SFTI-1 is stabilized by an N-terminal-C-terminal backbone cyclization and a further disulfide bridge to form a final bicyclic structure. This constrained structure is further rigidified by an extensive network of internal hydrogen bonds.

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Sunflower trypsin inhibitor-1 (SFTI-1) is a 14-amino acid cyclic peptide that shares an inhibitory loop with a sequence and structure similar to a larger family of serine protease inhibitors, the Bowman-Birk inhibitors. Here, we focus on the P5' residue in the Bowman-Birk inhibitory loop and produce a library of SFTI variants to characterize the P5' specificity of 11 different proteases. We identify seven amino acids that are generally preferred by these enzymes and also correlate with P5' sequence diversity in naturally occurring Bowman-Birk inhibitors.

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Engagement of an extended β-sheet is a common substrate/inhibitor interaction at the active site of serine proteases and is an important feature of Laskowski mechanism inhibitors that present a substrate-like loop to a target protease. This loop is cleaved but subsequently relegated forming a stable inhibitor/protease complex. Laskowski inhibitors are ubiquitous in nature and are used extensively in serine protease inhibitor design.

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Kallikrein-related peptidase 4 (KLK4) is a serine protease that has putative intracellular and extracellular functions in prostate cancer progression. Here we show that MCoTI-II, a 34-amino acid cyclic peptide found in the seeds of red gac (), is an inhibitor of KLK4. By grafting a preferred KLK4 cleavage sequence into MCoTI-II, we produced a highly potent KLK4 inhibitor ( = 0.

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Antifibrinolytic drugs provide important pharmacological interventions to reduce morbidity and mortality from excessive bleeding during surgery and after trauma. Current drugs used for inhibiting the dissolution of fibrin, the main structural component of blood clots, are associated with adverse events due to lack of potency, high doses, and nonselective inhibition mechanisms. These drawbacks warrant the development of a new generation of highly potent and selective fibrinolysis inhibitors.

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Article Synopsis
  • Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) are enzymes that initiate the breakdown of blood clots (fibrinolysis) by activating plasminogen, with uPA also playing a significant role in cancer progression due to its involvement in tissue remodeling.
  • Research indicated that inhibiting uPA, which is often overexpressed in various cancers, could be a potential therapy, though more exploration of peptide sequences that inhibit uPA is needed.
  • The study uncovered potent inhibitors for uPA from a peptide library and demonstrated that certain peptide sequences are highly effective against uPA but not tPA, enhancing our understanding of how these enzymes interact with different inhibitors
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Plants produce a diverse range of peptides and proteins that inhibit the activity of different serine proteases. The value of these inhibitors not only stems from their native role(s) in planta, but they are also regarded as promising templates for inhibitor engineering. Interest in this field has grown rapidly in recent years, particularly for therapeutic applications.

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The epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like domain is one of the most abundant disulfide-containing domains in nature and is involved in many cellular processes critical to life. Although many EGF-like domains participate in calcium-dependent functions by responding to the local calcium concentration, little is known about how this responsiveness is programmed at the molecular level. Here, we reveal the structural and environmental determinants underpinning the folding of a synthetic analogue of the EGF-A domain (from the low-density lipoprotein receptor).

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Once HIV-1 enters a cell, the viral core is uncoated by a poorly understood mechanism and the HIV-1 genomic RNA is reverse transcribed into DNA. Host cell factors are essential for these processes, although very few reverse transcription complex binding host cell factors have been convincingly shown to affect uncoating or reverse transcription. We previously reported that cellular eukaryotic translation elongation factor 1A (eEF1A) interacts tightly and directly with HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) for more efficient reverse transcription.

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Article Synopsis
  • * The research explores how the conformational changes of cyclosporin A, influenced by different solvent environments, affect its ability to permeate membranes using molecular dynamics simulations and experimental validation methods.
  • * Findings indicate that flexibility in the structure of cyclosporin A is crucial for its membrane permeability, suggesting that understanding these dynamics could lead to improved methods for peptide delivery and function modulation.
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Neutrophils are directly responsible for destroying invading pathogens via reactive oxygen species, antimicrobial peptides, and neutrophil serine proteases (NSPs). Imbalance between NSP activity and endogenous protease inhibitors is associated with chronic inflammatory disorders, and engineered inhibitors of NSPs are a potential therapeutic pathway. In this study we characterized the extended substrate specificity (P4-P1) of the NSP cathepsin G using a peptide substrate library.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The kallikrein-related peptidase (KLK) family, particularly KLK4, plays a significant role in cancer and metastasis, making it a target for selective inhibitors.
  • - Researchers have used X-ray crystal structures of KLK4 with specific inhibitors to understand how these interactions work, achieving detailed insights at atomic resolution.
  • - This study reveals the mechanisms of how KLK4 can be inhibited, which could help in designing new therapeutic inhibitors for cancer treatment and expand knowledge of serine protease functions.
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Proteases have pivotal roles in the skin's outermost layer, the epidermis. In the stratum corneum, serine proteases from the kallikrein-related peptidase (KLK) family have been implicated in several key homeostatic processes, including desquamation. However, the precise contribution of specific KLKs to each process remains unclear.

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Cyclotides are plant-derived host defense peptides displaying exceptional stability due to their cyclic cystine knot comprising three intertwined disulfide bonds and a cyclic backbone. Their six conserved cysteine residues are separated by backbone loops with diverse sequences. Prototypical cyclotides from the Möbius (kalata B1) and trypsin inhibitor (MCoTI-II) subfamilies lack sequence homology with one another, but both are able to penetrate cells, apparently via different mechanisms.

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Thrombosis is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality associated with cardiovascular diseases. Inhibition of factor XIIa (FXIIa) provides thrombus protection without bleeding complications. Here, we defined the extended substrate specificity of FXIIa and its close homologue factor Xa and used these data, together with inhibitor-based and structure-guided methods, to engineer selective FXIIa inhibitors based on Momordica cochinchinensis trypsin inhibitor-II.

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A new family of small plant peptides was recently described and found to be widespread throughout the Millereae and Heliantheae tribes of the sunflower family Asteraceae. These peptides originate from the post-translational processing of unusual seed-storage albumin genes, and have been termed PawS-derived peptides (PDPs). The prototypic family member is a 14-residue cyclic peptide with potent trypsin inhibitory activity named SunFlower Trypsin Inhibitor (SFTI-1).

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Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) signaling through the glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor (GLP-1R) is a key regulator of normal glucose metabolism, and exogenous GLP-1R agonist therapy is a promising avenue for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus. To date, the development of therapeutic GLP-1R agonists has focused on producing drugs with an extended serum half-life. This has been achieved by engineering synthetic analogs of GLP-1 or the more stable exogenous GLP-1R agonist exendin-4 (Ex-4).

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The cyclic conotoxin analogue cVc1.1 is a promising lead molecule for the development of new treatments for neuropathic and chronic pain. The design of this peptide includes a linker sequence that joins the N and C termini together, improving peptide stability while maintaining the structure and activity of the original linear Vc1.

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Kallikrein-related peptidase 5 (KLK5) is a promising therapeutic target in several skin diseases, including Netherton syndrome, and is emerging as a potential target in various cancers. In this study, we used a sparse matrix library of 125 individually synthesized peptide substrates to characterize the binding specificity of KLK5. The sequences most favored by KLK5 were GRSR, YRSR and GRNR, and we identified sequence-specific interactions involving the peptide N-terminus by analyzing kinetic constants (kcat and KM) and performing molecular dynamics simulations.

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Despite the widespread use of cyclization as a structure optimization tool in peptide chemistry, little is known about the effect of cyclization on peptide internal dynamics. In this work, we used a combination of multifield NMR relaxation and molecular dynamics techniques to study both monocyclic and polycyclic peptides that have promising biopharmaceutical properties, namely, VH, SFTI-1, and cVc1.1, and their less constrained analogues to study the effects of backbone cyclization (which forms a macrocycle) and disulfide-bond cyclization (which forms internal cycles).

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