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Native and Engineered Cyclic Disulfide-Rich Peptides as Drug Leads

Tristan J. Tyler, Thomas Durek, David J. Craik

2023Molecules35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bioactive peptides are a highly abundant and diverse group of molecules that exhibit a wide range of structural and functional variation. Despite their immense therapeutic potential, bioactive peptides have been traditionally perceived as poor drug candidates, largely due to intrinsic shortcomings that reflect their endogenous heritage, i.e., short biological half-lives and poor cell permeability. In this review, we examine the utility of molecular engineering to insert bioactive sequences into constrained scaffolds with desired pharmaceutical properties. Applying lessons learnt from nature, we focus on molecular grafting of cyclic disulfide-rich scaffolds (naturally derived or engineered), shown to be intrinsically stable and amenable to sequence modifications, and their utility as privileged frameworks in drug design.

Topics & Concepts

Disulfide bondCyclic peptideComputational biologyProtein engineeringDrug discoveryMolecular engineeringStructural motifDrugChemistryCombinatorial chemistryNanotechnologyPeptideBiologyBiochemistryMaterials sciencePharmacologyEnzymeBiochemical and Structural CharacterizationChemical Synthesis and AnalysisAntimicrobial Peptides and Activities
Native and Engineered Cyclic Disulfide-Rich Peptides as Drug Leads | Litcius