Collect

BASIC PARAMETERS Find an error

CAS: 1332642-10-0
MF:
MW:
Synonyms:

REPORT BY

Jing Zhang

Wuhan University
follow

Lu-Hua Lai

Peking University
follow

Steven R. Tannenbaum

Massachusetts Institute of Technology
follow

Samuel H. Gellman

University of Wisconsin
follow
Co-reporter: Ross W. Cheloha, Jeremy A. Sullivan, Tong Wang, Jordan M. Sand, John Sidney, Alessandro Sette, Mark E. Cook, M. Suresh, and Samuel H. Gellman
pp: 844
Publication Date(Web):January 5, 2015
DOI: 10.1021/cb500888q
Oligomers that contain both α- and β-amino acid residues, or “α/β-peptides”, have emerged as promising mimics of signal-bearing polypeptides that can inhibit or augment natural protein–protein interactions. α/β-Peptides that contain a sufficient proportion of β residues evenly distributed along the sequence can be highly resistant to enzymatic degradation, which is favorable with regard to in vivo applications. Little is known, however, about recognition of α/β-peptides by the immune system. Prior studies have focused almost entirely on examples that contain a single β residue; such α/β-peptides frequently retain the immunological profile of the analogous α-peptide. We have conducted α-peptide vs α/β-peptide comparisons involving higher β residue content, focusing on molecules with αααβ and ααβαααβ backbone repeat patterns. Among analogues of an 18-mer derived from the Bim BH3 domain and an 8-mer derived from secreted phospholipase-2 (sPLA2), we find that recognition by antibodies raised against the prototype α-peptide is suppressed by periodic α → β replacements. Complementary studies reveal that antibodies raised against Bim BH3- or sPLA2-derived α/β-peptides fail to recognize prototype α-peptides displaying identical side chain repertoires. Because polypeptides containing d-α-amino acid residues are of growing interest for biomedical applications, we included the enantiomer of the sPLA2-derived α-peptide in these studies; this d-peptide is fully competent as a hapten, but the resulting antibodies do not cross react with the enantiomeric peptide. Among analogues of the 9-mer CD8+ T-cell viral epitope GP33, we observe that periodic α → β replacements suppress participation in the MHC I + peptide + T-cell receptor ternary complexes that activate cytotoxic T-lymphocytes, due in part to disruption of MHC binding.

Judith S Sebolt-Leopold

University of Washington
follow

Ying Liu

Peking University
follow

Yong Chu

Fudan University
follow

Qing-juan Tang

Ocean University of China
follow

DeYong Ye

Fudan University
follow

Xiumei Zhang

Shandong University
follow