Brain-Penetrating Peptide Shuttles across the Blood–Brain Barrier and Extracellular-like Space
Xiujuan Peng, Xinquan Liu, Jae You Kim, Alex Nguyen, J. Sánchez Leal, Debadyuti Ghosh
Abstract
Systemic delivery of therapeutics into the brain is greatly impaired by multiple biological barriers─the blood–brain barrier (BBB) and the extracellular matrix (ECM) of the extracellular space. To address this problem, we developed a combinatorial approach to identify peptides that can shuttle and transport across both barriers. A cysteine-constrained heptapeptide M13 phage display library was iteratively panned against an established BBB model for three rounds to select for peptides that can transport across the barrier. Using next-generation DNA sequencing and in silico analysis, we identified peptides that were selectively enriched from successive rounds of panning for functional validation in vitro and in vivo. Select peptide-presenting phages exhibited efficient shuttling across the in vitro BBB model. Two clones, Pep-3 and Pep-9, exhibited higher specificity and efficiency of transcytosis than controls. We confirmed that peptides Pep-3 and Pep-9 demonstrated better diffusive transport through the extracellular matrix than gold standard nona-arginine and clinically trialed angiopep-2 peptides. In in vivo studies, we demonstrated that systemically administered Pep-3 and Pep-9 peptide-presenting phages penetrate the BBB and distribute into the brain parenchyma. In addition, free peptides Pep-3 and Pep-9 achieved higher accumulation in the brain than free angiopep-2 and may exhibit brain targeting. In summary, these in vitro and in vivo studies highlight that combinatorial phage display with a designed selection strategy can identify peptides as promising carriers, which are able to overcome the multiple biological barriers of the brain and shuttle different-sized molecules from small fluorophores to large macromolecules for improved delivery into the brain.