open access publication

Article, 2024

Tuning the double lipidation of salmon calcitonin to introduce a pore-like membrane translocation mechanism

Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, ISSN 0021-9797, 1095-7103, Volume 669, Pages 198-210, 10.1016/j.jcis.2024.04.093

Contributors

Lund, Philip M 0000-0001-5935-9753 [1] Kristensen, Kasper [1] Larsen, Nanna Wichmann [1] Knuhtsen, Astrid 0000-0001-7622-5634 [1] Hansen, Morten Borre [1] Hjørringgaard, Claudia Ulrich 0000-0003-0260-1777 [1] Eriksen, Anne Zebitz [1] Urquhart, Andrew James 0000-0002-5322-0002 [1] Mortensen, Kim I 0000-0002-2903-8999 [1] Simonsen, Jens Baek 0000-0002-4797-8570 [1] Andresen, Thomas Lars 0000-0002-1048-127X (Corresponding author) [1] Larsen, Jannik Bruun 0000-0003-4754-2803 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Technical University of Denmark
  2. [NORA names: DTU Technical University of Denmark; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

A widespread strategy to increase the transport of therapeutic peptides across cellular membranes has been to attach lipid moieties to the peptide backbone (lipidation) to enhance their intrinsic membrane interaction. Efforts in vitro and in vivo investigating the correlation between lipidation characteristics and peptide membrane translocation efficiency have traditionally relied on end-point read-out assays and trial-and-error-based optimization strategies. Consequently, the molecular details of how therapeutic peptide lipidation affects it's membrane permeation and translocation mechanisms remain unresolved. Here we employed salmon calcitonin as a model therapeutic peptide and synthesized nine double lipidated analogs with varying lipid chain lengths. We used single giant unilamellar vesicle (GUV) calcein influx time-lapse fluorescence microscopy to determine how tuning the lipidation length can lead to an All-or-None GUV filling mechanism, indicative of a peptide mediated pore formation. Finally, we used a GUVs-containing-inner-GUVs assay to demonstrate that only peptide analogs capable of inducing pore formation show efficient membrane translocation. Our data provided the first mechanistic details on how therapeutic peptide lipidation affects their membrane perturbation mechanism and demonstrated that fine-tuning lipidation parameters could induce an intrinsic pore-forming capability. These insights and the microscopy based workflow introduced for investigating structure-function relations could be pivotal for optimizing future peptide design strategies.

Keywords

all-or-none, analogs, assay, backbone, calcitonin, capability, cellular membranes, chain length, characteristics, correlation, data, design strategy, details, efficiency, filling mechanism, fluorescence microscopy, formation, in vitro, in vivo, induce pore formation, interaction, investigating structure-function relations, length, lipid, lipid chain length, lipid characteristics, lipid length, lipid moiety, lipid parameters, mechanism, membrane, membrane interactions, membrane permeation, membrane perturbation mechanism, membrane translocation, membrane translocation mechanism, microscopy, model therapeutic peptide, moiety, molecular details, optimal strategy, parameters, peptide, peptide analogs, peptide backbone, peptide design strategy, peptide lipid, permeation, perturbation mechanism, pore formation, pore-forming capability, read-out assays, relations, salmon, salmon calcitonin, strategies, structure-function relations, therapeutic peptides, time-lapse fluorescence microscopy, translocation, translocation efficiency, translocation mechanism, transport, workflow

Funders

  • Novo Nordisk Foundation

Data Provider: Digital Science