摘要

We have evaluated "NMEGylation"-the covalent attachment of an oligo-N-methoxyethylglycine (NMEG) chain-as a new form of peptide/protein modification to enhance the bioavailability of short peptides. OligoNMEGs are hydrophilic polyethylene glycol-like molecules made by solid-phase synthesis, typically up to 40 monomers in length. They have been studied as nonfouling surface coatings and as monodisperse mobility modifiers for free-solution conjugate capillary electrophoresis. However, polyNMEGs have not been demonstrated before this work as modifiers of therapeutic proteins. In prior published work, we identified a short peptide, "C(20)," as a potential extracellular inhibitor of the fusion of human respiratory syncytial virus with mammalian cells. The present study was aimed at improving the C(20) peptide's stability and solubility. To this end, we synthesized and studied a series of NMEGylated C(20) peptide peptoid bioconjugates comprising different numbers of NMEGs at either the N- or C-terminus of C(20). NMEGylation was found to greatly improve this peptide's solubility and serum stability; however, longer polyNMEGs (n > 3) deleteriously affected peptide binding to the target protein. By incorporating just one NMEG monomer, along with a glycine monomer as a flexible spacer, at C(20)'s N-terminus (NMEG-Gly-C(20)), we increased both solubility and serum stability greatly, while recovering a binding affinity comparable to that of unmodified C(20) peptide. Our results suggest that NMEGylation with an optimized number of NMEG monomers and a proper linker could be useful, more broadly, as a novel modification to enhance bioavailability and efficacy of therapeutic peptides.

  • 出版日期2011