Assembly of Glycopeptides in Living Cells Resembling Viral Infection for Cargo Delivery
By
Tian, F (Tian, Feng) [1] ; Guo, RC (Guo, Ruo-Chen) [1] ; Wu, CX (Wu, Chunxia) [1] ; Liu, X (Liu, Xin) [1] ; Zhang, ZY (Zhang, Zeyu) [1] ; Wang, YM (Wang, Yamei) [2] , [3] ; Wang, H (Wang, Hao) [1] ; Li, GY (Li, Gongyu) [2] , [3] ; Yu, ZL (Yu, Zhilin) [1] , [4]
(provided by Clarivate)
DOI
10.1002/anie.202404703
Early Access
JUN 2024
Indexed
2024-06-14
Document Type
Article; Early Access
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Abstract
Self-assembly in living cells represents one versatile strategy for drug delivery; however, it suffers from the limited precision and efficiency. Inspired by viral traits, we here report a cascade targeting-hydrolysis-transformation (THT) assembly of glycosylated peptides in living cells holistically resembling viral infection for efficient cargo delivery and combined tumor therapy. We design a glycosylated peptide via incorporating a beta-galactose-serine residue into bola-amphiphilic sequences. Co-assembling of the glycosylated peptide with two counterparts containing irinotecan (IRI) or ligand TSFAEYWNLLSP (PMI) results in formation of the glycosylated co-assemblies SgVEIP, which target cancer cells via beta-galactose-galectin-1 association and undergo galactosidase-induced morphological transformation. While GSH-reduction causes release of IRI from the co-assemblies, the PMI moieties release p53 and facilitate cell death via binding with protein MDM2. Cellular experiments show membrane targeting, endo-/lysosome-mediated internalization and in situ formation of nanofibers in cytoplasm by SgVEIP. This cascade THT process enables efficient delivery of IRI and PMI into cancer cells secreting Gal-1 and overexpressing beta-galactosidase. In vivo studies illustrate enhanced tumor accumulation and retention of the glycosylated co-assemblies, thereby suppressing tumor growth. Our findings demonstrate an in situ assembly strategy mimicking viral infection, thus providing a new route for drug delivery and cancer therapy in the future.
A glycosylated peptide is designed to formulate SgVEIP that exhibits cancer cell targeting and enzyme-responsive properties arising from the galactose-galectin-1 association and galactosidase-induced hydrolysis. Precursor SgVEIP undergoes an in situ cascade targeting-hydrolysis-transformation assembly resembling to viral infection in a holistic manner, thus allowing for efficient delivery of irinotecan and peptide drugs to kill cancer cells.