Spatiotemporal Self Assembly of Peptides Dictates Cancer Selective Toxicity
- Abstract
- The intracellular or pericellular self-assembly of amphiphilic peptides is emerging as a potent cancer therapeutic strategy. Achieving the self-assembly of amphiphilic peptides inside a cell or cellular organelle is challenging due to the complex cellular environment, which consists of many amphiphilic biomolecules that may alter the self-assembling propensity of the synthetic peptides. Herein, we show that the hydrophobic-hydrophilic balance of the amphiphilic peptides determines the self-assembling propensity, thereby controlling the fate of the cell. A series of peptides were designed to target and self-assemble inside the mitochondria of cancer cells. The hydrophobicity of the peptides was tuned by varying their N-terminus capping. The analysis showed that the largest hydrophobic peptide was self-assembled before reaching the mitochondria and showed no selectivity toward cancer cells, whereas hydrophilic peptides could not self-assemble inside the mitochondria. Optimum balance between hydrophobicity and hydrophilicity is a critical factor for achieving self-assembly inside the mitochondria, thereby providing greater selectivity against cancer cells.
- Author(s)
- Jin, Seongeon; Jeena, M. T.; Jana, Batakrishna; Moon, Minhyeok; Choi, Huyeon; Lee, Eunji; Ryu, Ja-Hyoung
- Issued Date
- 2020-12
- Type
- Article
- DOI
- 10.1021/acs.biomac.0c01000
- URI
- https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/11834
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