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Direct Cytosolic Delivery of Polar Cargo to Cells by Spontaneous Membrane-translocating Peptides
- Source :
- Journal of Biological Chemistry. 288:29974-29986
- Publication Year :
- 2013
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2013.
-
Abstract
- Direct cellular entry of potentially useful polar compounds into cells is prevented by the hydrophobic barrier of the membrane. Toward circumventing this barrier, we used high throughput screening to identify a family of peptides that carry membrane-impermeant cargos across synthetic membranes. Here we characterize the plasma membrane translocation of these peptides with polar cargos under a variety of conditions. The spontaneous membrane-translocating peptides (SMTPs) delivered the zwitterionic, membrane-impermeant dye tetramethylrhodamine (TAMRA) into cells even when the conditions were not permissive for endocytosis. They also delivered the larger, anionic membrane-impermeant dye Alexa Fluor 546 but did not deliver a quantum dot nanoparticle. Under all conditions, the SMTP-cargo filled the cytoplasm with a diffuse, non-punctate fluorescence that was partially excluded from the nucleus. D-amino acid peptides behaved identically in vitro, ruling out proteolysis as an important factor in the diffuse cellular distribution. Thus, cytosolic delivery of SMTP-cargo conjugates is dominated by direct membrane translocation. This is in sharp contrast to Arg9-TAMRA, a representative highly cationic, cell-penetrating peptide, which entered cells only when endocytosis was permitted. Arg9-TAMRA triggered large scale endocytosis and did not appreciably escape the endosomal compartments in the 1-h timescales we studied. When injected into mice, SMTP-TAMRA conjugates were found in many tissues even after 2 h. Unconjugated TAMRA was rapidly cleared and did not become systemically distributed. SMTPs are a platform that could improve delivery of many polar compounds to cells, in the laboratory or in the clinic, including those that would otherwise be rejected as drugs because they are membrane-impermeant.
- Subjects :
- Cell Survival
Endosome
CHO Cells
Biology
Endocytosis
Biochemistry
Cell membrane
Mice
Cricetulus
Cytosol
Drug Delivery Systems
Cricetinae
Membrane Biology
medicine
Animals
Amino Acid Sequence
Molecular Biology
Fluorescent Dyes
Alexa Fluor
Mice, Inbred BALB C
Microscopy, Confocal
Rhodamines
Quinolinium Compounds
Cell Membrane
Reproducibility of Results
Biological Transport
Cell Biology
Membrane transport
Membrane
medicine.anatomical_structure
Biophysics
lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins)
Female
Peptides
Membrane biophysics
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00219258
- Volume :
- 288
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Biological Chemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....077606d7145c438ef003fb941a6132ef