Litcius/Paper detail

Advancing peptide siRNA-carrier designs through L/D-amino acid stereochemical modifications to enhance gene silencing

Charles E. Holjencin, Colton R. Feinberg, Travis Hedrick, Gregory Halsey, Robert D. Williams, Priya Patel, Evan Biles, James Cummings, Chance Wagner, Naren Vyavahare, Andrew Jakymiw

2021Molecular Therapy — Nucleic Acids17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The 599 peptide has been previously shown to effectively deliver small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) to cancer cells, inducing targeted-oncogene silencing, with a consequent inhibition of tumor growth. Although effective, this study was undertaken to advance the 599 peptide siRNA-carrier design through L/D-amino acid stereochemical modifications. Consequently, 599 was modified to generate eight different peptide variants, incorporating either different stereochemical patterns of L/D-amino acids or a specific D-amino acid substitution. Upon analysis of the variants, it was observed that these modifications could, in some instances, increase/decrease the binding, nuclease/serum stability, and complex release of siRNAs, as well as influence the gene-silencing efficiencies of the complex. These modifications were also found to affect cellular uptake and intracellular localization patterns of siRNA cargo, with one particular variant capable of mediating binding of siRNAs to specific cellular projections, identified as filopodia. Interestingly, this variant also exhibited the most enhanced gene silencing in comparison to the parent 599 peptide, thus suggesting a possible connection between filopodia binding and enhanced gene silencing. Together, these data demonstrate the utility of peptide stereochemistry, as well as the importance of a key D-amino acid modification, in advancing the 599 carrier design for the enhancement of gene silencing in cancer cells. The 599 peptide has been previously shown to effectively deliver small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) to cancer cells, inducing targeted-oncogene silencing, with a consequent inhibition of tumor growth. Although effective, this study was undertaken to advance the 599 peptide siRNA-carrier design through L/D-amino acid stereochemical modifications. Consequently, 599 was modified to generate eight different peptide variants, incorporating either different stereochemical patterns of L/D-amino acids or a specific D-amino acid substitution. Upon analysis of the variants, it was observed that these modifications could, in some instances, increase/decrease the binding, nuclease/serum stability, and complex release of siRNAs, as well as influence the gene-silencing efficiencies of the complex. These modifications were also found to affect cellular uptake and intracellular localization patterns of siRNA cargo, with one particular variant capable of mediating binding of siRNAs to specific cellular projections, identified as filopodia. Interestingly, this variant also exhibited the most enhanced gene silencing in comparison to the parent 599 peptide, thus suggesting a possible connection between filopodia binding and enhanced gene silencing. Together, these data demonstrate the utility of peptide stereochemistry, as well as the importance of a key D-amino acid modification, in advancing the 599 carrier design for the enhancement of gene silencing in cancer cells.

Topics & Concepts

Gene silencingSmall interfering RNARNA interferencePeptideAmino acidTrans-acting siRNABiologyCell biologyChemistryGeneBiochemistryRNARNA Interference and Gene DeliveryAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesDNA and Nucleic Acid Chemistry