Development of a novel cholesterol tag-based system for trans-membrane transport of protein drugs.

Biosci Trends

Institute of Neurology, National Clinical Research Center for Infectious Diseases, the Third People's Hospital of Shenzhen, Shenzhen, Guangdong, China.

Published: January 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The development of an intracellular transport system for protein drugs faces two main challenges: penetrating cellular membranes and effectively loading high doses of protein drugs.
  • A new cholesterol tag (C-Tag) was created, significantly enhancing cellular uptake of Fab proteins by 902-fold compared to Fab alone, demonstrating successful membrane transport.
  • The C-Tag also improved loading of proteins into large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) by 10.1-fold, suggesting its potential for facilitating high-dose protein delivery in drug development.

Article Abstract

The main technological difficulties of developing an intracellular (transmembrane) transport system for protein drugs lie in two points: i) overcoming the barriers in the cellular membrane, and ii) loading enough protein drugs, and particularly high-dose proteins, into particles. To address these two technological problems, we recently developed a novel cholesterol tag (C-Tag)-based transmembrane transport system. This pilot study found that the C-Tag dramatically improved the cellular uptake of Fab (902-fold, vs. Fab alone) into living cells, indicating that it successfully achieved transmembrane transport. Moreover, C-Tag-mediated membrane transport was verified using micron-scale large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs, approximately 1.5 μm)-based particles. The C-Tagged Fab was able to permeate the liposomal bilayer and it greatly enhanced (a 10.1-fold increase vs. Fab alone) internalization of proteins into the LUV-based particles, indicating that the C-Tag loaded enough proteins into particles for use of high-dose proteins. Accordingly, we established a novel C-Tag-based transport system that has overcome the known technological difficulties of protein transmembrane delivery, and this might be a useful technology for drug development in the future.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.5582/bst.2023.01285DOI Listing

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