Penetrating the Blood-Brain Barrier with New Peptide-Porphyrin Conjugates Having anti-HIV Activity

被引:29
作者
Mendonca, Diogo A. [1 ]
Bakker, Mariet [2 ]
Cruz-Oliveira, Christine [1 ]
Neves, Vera [1 ]
Angeles Jimenez, Maria [3 ]
Defaus, Sira [4 ]
Cavaco, Marco [1 ]
Veiga, Ana Salome [1 ]
Cadima-Couto, Iris [1 ]
Castanho, Miguel A. R. B. [1 ]
Andreu, David [4 ]
Todorovski, Toni [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lisbon, Fac Med, Inst Med Mol, P-1649028 Lisbon, Portugal
[2] Avans Univ Appl Sci, NL-5223 DE Breda, Netherlands
[3] Inst Phys Chem Rocasolano IQFR CSIC, Dept Biol Phys Chem, Madrid 28006, Spain
[4] Pompeu Fabra Univ, Dept Expt & Hlth Sci, Barcelona 08003, Spain
基金
欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS TYPE-1; CENTRAL-NERVOUS-SYSTEM; DRUG-DELIVERY; SHUTTLE; THERAPY; INACTIVATION; INHIBITOR; RECEPTOR; AGENTS;
D O I
10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.1c00123
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Passing through the blood-brain barrier (BBB) to treat neurological conditions is one of the main hurdles in modern medicine. Many drugs with promising in vitro profiles become ineffective in vivo due to BBB restrictive permeability. In particular, this includes drugs such as antiviral porphyrins, with the ability to fight brain-resident viruses causing diseases such as HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND). In the last two decades, BBB shuttles, particularly peptide-based ones, have shown promise in carrying various payloads across the BBB. Thus, peptide-drug conjugates (PDCs) formed by covalent attachment of a BBB peptide shuttle and an antiviral drug may become key therapeutic tools in treating neurological disorders of viral origin. In this study, we have used various approaches (guanidinium, phosphonium, and carbodiimide-based couplings) for on-resin synthesis of new peptide-porphyrin conjugates (PPCs) with BBB-crossing and potential antiviral activity. After careful fine-tuning of the synthetic chemistry, DIC/oxyma has emerged as a preferred method, by which 14 different PPCs have been made and satisfactorily characterized. The PPCs are prepared by coupling a porphyrin carboxyl group to an amino group (either N-terminal or a Lys side chain) of the peptide shuttle and show effective in vitro BBB translocation ability, low cytotoxicity toward mouse brain endothelial cells, and low hemolytic activity. Three of the PPCs, MP-P5, P4-MP, and P4-L-MP, effectively inhibiting HIV infectivity in vitro, stand out as most promising. Their efficacy against other brain-targeting viruses (Dengue, Zika, and SARS-CoV-2) is currently under evaluation, with preliminary results confirming that PPCs are a promising strategy to treat viral brain infections.
引用
收藏
页码:1067 / 1077
页数:11
相关论文
共 60 条
[11]   Effective in Vivo Targeting of Influenza Virus through a Cell-enetrating/Fusion Inhibitor Tandem Peptide Anchored to the Plasma Membrane [J].
Figueira, T. N. ;
Augusto, M. T. ;
Rybkina, K. ;
Stelitano, D. ;
Noval, M. G. ;
Harder, O. E. ;
Veiga, A. S. ;
Huey, D. ;
Alabi, C. A. ;
Biswas, S. ;
Niewiesk, S. ;
Moscona, A. ;
Santos, N. C. ;
Castanho, M. A. R. B. ;
Porotto, M. .
BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY, 2018, 29 (10) :3362-3376
[12]   Targeting of the epidermal growth factor receptor with mesoporphyrin IX-peptide conjugates [J].
Fontenot, Krystal R. ;
Ongarora, Benson G. ;
LeBlanc, Logan E. ;
Zhou, Zehua ;
Jois, Seetharama D. ;
Vicente, M. Graca H. .
JOURNAL OF PORPHYRINS AND PHTHALOCYANINES, 2016, 20 (1-4) :352-366
[13]   HIV-1 associated dementia: symptoms and causes [J].
Ghafouri, Mohammad ;
Amini, Shohreh ;
Khalili, Kamel ;
Sawaya, Bassel E. .
RETROVIROLOGY, 2006, 3 (1)
[14]   Synthetic approaches for the conjugation of porphyrins and related macrocycles to peptides and proteins [J].
Giuntini, Francesca ;
Alonso, Cristina M. A. ;
Boyle, Ross W. .
PHOTOCHEMICAL & PHOTOBIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2011, 10 (05) :759-791
[15]   The neuropathogenesis of AIDS [J].
González-Scarano, F ;
Martín-García, J .
NATURE REVIEWS IMMUNOLOGY, 2005, 5 (01) :69-81
[16]   NEW TECHNIQUE FOR ASSAY OF INFECTIVITY OF HUMAN ADENOVIRUS 5 DNA [J].
GRAHAM, FL ;
VANDEREB, AJ .
VIROLOGY, 1973, 52 (02) :456-467
[17]   Shuttle-Mediated Nanoparticle Delivery to the Blood-Brain Barrier [J].
Guarnieri, Daniela ;
Falanga, Annarita ;
Muscetti, Ornella ;
Tarallo, Rossella ;
Fusco, Sabato ;
Galdiero, Massimiliano ;
Galdiero, Stefania ;
Netti, Paolo A. .
SMALL, 2013, 9 (06) :853-862
[18]   Sonodynamic therapy of cancer using a novel porphyrin derivative, DCPH-P-Na(I), which is devoid of photosensitivity [J].
Hachimine, Ken ;
Shibaguchi, Hirotomo ;
Kuroki, Motomu ;
Yamada, Hiromi ;
Kinugasa, Tetsushi ;
Nakae, Yoshinori ;
Asano, Ryuji ;
Sakata, Isao ;
Yamashita, Yuichi ;
Shirakusa, Takayuki ;
Kuroki, Masahide .
CANCER SCIENCE, 2007, 98 (06) :916-920
[19]   Peptide Conjugates with Small Molecules Designed to Enhance Efficacy and Safety [J].
He, Rongjun ;
Finan, Brian ;
Mayer, John P. ;
DiMarchi, Richard D. .
MOLECULES, 2019, 24 (10)
[20]   In vitro models of the blood-brain barrier: An overview of commonly used brain endothelial cell culture models and guidelines for their use [J].
Helms, Hans C. ;
Abbott, N. Joan ;
Burek, Malgorzata ;
Cecchelli, Romeo ;
Couraud, Pierre-Olivier ;
Deli, Maria A. ;
Forster, Carola ;
Galla, Hans J. ;
Romero, Ignacio A. ;
Shusta, Eric V. ;
Stebbins, Matthew J. ;
Vandenhaute, Elodie ;
Weksler, Babette ;
Brodin, Birger .
JOURNAL OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW AND METABOLISM, 2016, 36 (05) :862-890