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Feasibility of Transport of 26 Biologically Active Ultrashort Peptides via LAT and PEPT Family Transporters

The aim of this work is to verify the possibility of transport of 26 biologically active ultrashort peptides (USPs) into cells via LAT and PEPT family transporters. Molecular modeling and computer-assisted docking of peptide ligands revealed that the size and structure of ligand-binding sites of the...

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Autores principales: Khavinson, Vladimir Khatskelevich, Linkova, Natalia Sergeevna, Rudskoy, Andrey Ivanovich, Petukhov, Michael Gennadievich
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10046148/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36979488
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom13030552
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author Khavinson, Vladimir Khatskelevich
Linkova, Natalia Sergeevna
Rudskoy, Andrey Ivanovich
Petukhov, Michael Gennadievich
author_facet Khavinson, Vladimir Khatskelevich
Linkova, Natalia Sergeevna
Rudskoy, Andrey Ivanovich
Petukhov, Michael Gennadievich
author_sort Khavinson, Vladimir Khatskelevich
collection PubMed
description The aim of this work is to verify the possibility of transport of 26 biologically active ultrashort peptides (USPs) into cells via LAT and PEPT family transporters. Molecular modeling and computer-assisted docking of peptide ligands revealed that the size and structure of ligand-binding sites of the amino acid transporters LAT1, LAT2, and of the peptide transporter PEPT1 are sufficient for the transport of the 26 biologically active di-, tri-, and tetra-peptides. Comparative analysis of the binding of all possible di- and tri-peptides (8400 compounds) at the binding sites of the LAT and PEPT family transporters has been carried out. The 26 biologically active USPs systematically showed higher binding scores to LAT1, LAT2, and PEPT1, as compared with di- and tri-peptides, for which no biological activity has been established. This indicates an important possible role which LAT and PEPT family transporters may play in a variety of biological activities of the 26 biologically active peptides under investigation in this study. Most of the 26 studied USPs were found to bind to the LAT1, LAT2, and PEPT1 transporters more efficiently than the known substrates or inhibitors of these transporters. Peptides ED, DS, DR, EDR, EDG, AEDR, AEDL, KEDP, and KEDG, and peptoids DS7 and KE17 with negatively charged Asp(−) or Glu(−) amino acid residues at the N-terminus and neutral or positively charged residues at the C-terminus of the peptide are found to be the most effective ligands of the transporters under investigation. It can be assumed that the antitumor effect of the KE, EW, EDG, and AEDG peptides could be associated with their ability to inhibit the LAT1, LAT2, and PEPT1 amino acid transporters. The data obtained lead to new prospects for further study of the mechanisms of transport of USP-based drugs into the cell and design of new antitumor drugs.
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spelling pubmed-100461482023-03-29 Feasibility of Transport of 26 Biologically Active Ultrashort Peptides via LAT and PEPT Family Transporters Khavinson, Vladimir Khatskelevich Linkova, Natalia Sergeevna Rudskoy, Andrey Ivanovich Petukhov, Michael Gennadievich Biomolecules Article The aim of this work is to verify the possibility of transport of 26 biologically active ultrashort peptides (USPs) into cells via LAT and PEPT family transporters. Molecular modeling and computer-assisted docking of peptide ligands revealed that the size and structure of ligand-binding sites of the amino acid transporters LAT1, LAT2, and of the peptide transporter PEPT1 are sufficient for the transport of the 26 biologically active di-, tri-, and tetra-peptides. Comparative analysis of the binding of all possible di- and tri-peptides (8400 compounds) at the binding sites of the LAT and PEPT family transporters has been carried out. The 26 biologically active USPs systematically showed higher binding scores to LAT1, LAT2, and PEPT1, as compared with di- and tri-peptides, for which no biological activity has been established. This indicates an important possible role which LAT and PEPT family transporters may play in a variety of biological activities of the 26 biologically active peptides under investigation in this study. Most of the 26 studied USPs were found to bind to the LAT1, LAT2, and PEPT1 transporters more efficiently than the known substrates or inhibitors of these transporters. Peptides ED, DS, DR, EDR, EDG, AEDR, AEDL, KEDP, and KEDG, and peptoids DS7 and KE17 with negatively charged Asp(−) or Glu(−) amino acid residues at the N-terminus and neutral or positively charged residues at the C-terminus of the peptide are found to be the most effective ligands of the transporters under investigation. It can be assumed that the antitumor effect of the KE, EW, EDG, and AEDG peptides could be associated with their ability to inhibit the LAT1, LAT2, and PEPT1 amino acid transporters. The data obtained lead to new prospects for further study of the mechanisms of transport of USP-based drugs into the cell and design of new antitumor drugs. MDPI 2023-03-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10046148/ /pubmed/36979488 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom13030552 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Khavinson, Vladimir Khatskelevich
Linkova, Natalia Sergeevna
Rudskoy, Andrey Ivanovich
Petukhov, Michael Gennadievich
Feasibility of Transport of 26 Biologically Active Ultrashort Peptides via LAT and PEPT Family Transporters
title Feasibility of Transport of 26 Biologically Active Ultrashort Peptides via LAT and PEPT Family Transporters
title_full Feasibility of Transport of 26 Biologically Active Ultrashort Peptides via LAT and PEPT Family Transporters
title_fullStr Feasibility of Transport of 26 Biologically Active Ultrashort Peptides via LAT and PEPT Family Transporters
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility of Transport of 26 Biologically Active Ultrashort Peptides via LAT and PEPT Family Transporters
title_short Feasibility of Transport of 26 Biologically Active Ultrashort Peptides via LAT and PEPT Family Transporters
title_sort feasibility of transport of 26 biologically active ultrashort peptides via lat and pept family transporters
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10046148/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36979488
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom13030552
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