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De novo macrocyclic peptides for inhibiting, stabilizing, and probing the function of the retromer endosomal trafficking complex

Authors :
Amy Kendall
Zhe Yang
Yi Cui
David A. Stroud
Robert G. Parton
Ryan J. Hall
Toby Passioura
Rajesh Ghai
Robert Reid
Timothy A. Hill
Boyang Xie
Joanna Sacharz
Suzanne J. Norwood
Michael D. Healy
Natalya Leneva
David P. Fairlie
Rohan D. Teasdale
Qian Guo
Sachini Fonseka
Kai-En Chen
Hiroaki Suga
Lauren P. Jackson
Brett M. Collins
Source :
Science Advances
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2021.

Abstract

Description<br />Novel macrocyclic peptides are found that bind and modulate the function of the retromer membrane trafficking complex.<br />The retromer complex (Vps35-Vps26-Vps29) is essential for endosomal membrane trafficking and signaling. Mutation of the retromer subunit Vps35 causes late-onset Parkinson’s disease, while viral and bacterial pathogens can hijack the complex during cellular infection. To modulate and probe its function, we have created a novel series of macrocyclic peptides that bind retromer with high affinity and specificity. Crystal structures show that most of the cyclic peptides bind to Vps29 via a Pro-Leu–containing sequence, structurally mimicking known interactors such as TBC1D5 and blocking their interaction with retromer in vitro and in cells. By contrast, macrocyclic peptide RT-L4 binds retromer at the Vps35-Vps26 interface and is a more effective molecular chaperone than reported small molecules, suggesting a new therapeutic avenue for targeting retromer. Last, tagged peptides can be used to probe the cellular localization of retromer and its functional interactions in cells, providing novel tools for studying retromer function.

Details

ISSN :
23752548
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4bad1a951f22f51ed878b0d84d5eba63