Mishra, Snehasis ; Sannigrahi, Achinta ; Ruidas, Santu ; Chatterjee, Sujan ; Roy, Kamalesh ; Misra, Deblina ; Maity, Barun Kumar ; Paul, Rabindranath ; Ghosh, Chandan Kumar ; Saha, Krishna Das ; Bhaumik, Asim ; Chattopadhyay, Krishnananda (2024) Conformational switch of a peptide provides a novel strategy to design peptide loaded porous organic polymer for pyroptosis pathway mediated cancer therapy Small, 20 (42). ISSN 1613-6810
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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1002/smll.202402953
Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smll.202402953
Abstract
While peptide-based drug development is extensively explored, this strategy has limitations due to rapid excretion from the body (or shorter half-life in the body) and vulnerability to protease-mediated degradation. To overcome these limitations, a novel strategy for the development of a peptide-based anticancer agent is introduced, utilizing the conformation switch property of a chameleon sequence stretch (PEP1) derived from a mycobacterium secretory protein, MPT63. The selected peptide is then loaded into a new porous organic polymer (PG-DFC-POP) synthesized using phloroglucinol and a cresol derivative via a condensation reaction to deliver the peptide selectively to cancer cells. Utilizing ensemble and single-molecule approaches, this peptide undergoes a transition from a disordered to an alpha-helical conformation, triggered by the acidic environment within cancer cells that is demonstrated. This adopted alpha-helical conformation resulted in the formation of proteolysis-resistant oligomers, which showed efficient membrane pore-forming activity selectively for negatively charged phospholipids accumulated in cancer cell membranes. The experimental results demonstrated that the peptide-loaded PG-DFC-POP-PEP1 exhibited significant cytotoxicity in cancer cells, leading to cell death through the Pyroptosis pathway, which is established by monitoring numerous associated events starting from lysosome membrane damage to GSDMD-induced cell membrane demolition. This novel conformational switch-based drug design strategy is believed to have great potential in endogenous environment-responsive cancer therapy and the development of future drug candidates to mitigate cancers.
Item Type: | Article |
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Source: | Copyright of this article belongs to John Wiley and Sons. |
ID Code: | 137173 |
Deposited On: | 02 Sep 2025 08:25 |
Last Modified: | 02 Sep 2025 08:25 |
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