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Duplication of clostridial binding domains for enhanced macromolecular delivery into neurons

Neurological diseases constitute a quarter of global disease burden and are expected to rise worldwide with the ageing of human populations. There is an increasing need to develop new molecular systems which can deliver drugs specifically into neurons, non-dividing cells meant to last a human lifeti...

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Autores principales: Leese, Charlotte, Bresnahan, Rebecca, Doran, Ciara, Simsek, Deniz, Fellows, Alexander D., Restani, Laura, Caleo, Matteo, Schiavo, Giampietro, Mavlyutov, Timur, Henke, Tina, Binz, Thomas, Davletov, Bazbek
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7043326/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32140681
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.toxcx.2019.100019
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author Leese, Charlotte
Bresnahan, Rebecca
Doran, Ciara
Simsek, Deniz
Fellows, Alexander D.
Restani, Laura
Caleo, Matteo
Schiavo, Giampietro
Mavlyutov, Timur
Henke, Tina
Binz, Thomas
Davletov, Bazbek
author_facet Leese, Charlotte
Bresnahan, Rebecca
Doran, Ciara
Simsek, Deniz
Fellows, Alexander D.
Restani, Laura
Caleo, Matteo
Schiavo, Giampietro
Mavlyutov, Timur
Henke, Tina
Binz, Thomas
Davletov, Bazbek
author_sort Leese, Charlotte
collection PubMed
description Neurological diseases constitute a quarter of global disease burden and are expected to rise worldwide with the ageing of human populations. There is an increasing need to develop new molecular systems which can deliver drugs specifically into neurons, non-dividing cells meant to last a human lifetime. Neuronal drug delivery must rely on agents which can recognise neurons with high specificity and affinity. Here we used a recently introduced ‘stapling’ system to prepare macromolecules carrying duplicated binding domains from the clostridial family of neurotoxins. We engineered individual parts of clostridial neurotoxins separately and combined them using a strong alpha-helical bundle. We show that combining two identical binding domains of tetanus and botulinum type D neurotoxins, in a sterically defined way by protein stapling, allows enhanced intracellular delivery of molecules into neurons. We also engineered a botulinum neurotoxin type C variant with a duplicated binding domain which increased enzymatic delivery compared to the native type C toxin. We conclude that duplication of the binding parts of tetanus or botulinum neurotoxins will allow production of high avidity agents which could deliver imaging reagents and large therapeutic enzymes into neurons with superior efficiency.
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spelling pubmed-70433262020-03-03 Duplication of clostridial binding domains for enhanced macromolecular delivery into neurons Leese, Charlotte Bresnahan, Rebecca Doran, Ciara Simsek, Deniz Fellows, Alexander D. Restani, Laura Caleo, Matteo Schiavo, Giampietro Mavlyutov, Timur Henke, Tina Binz, Thomas Davletov, Bazbek Toxicon X Articles from Special Issue on Toxins 2019, Edited by:Dr. David Simpson, Dr. Marie Vidailhet, Dr. Matteo Caleo and Dr. Sabine Pellett Neurological diseases constitute a quarter of global disease burden and are expected to rise worldwide with the ageing of human populations. There is an increasing need to develop new molecular systems which can deliver drugs specifically into neurons, non-dividing cells meant to last a human lifetime. Neuronal drug delivery must rely on agents which can recognise neurons with high specificity and affinity. Here we used a recently introduced ‘stapling’ system to prepare macromolecules carrying duplicated binding domains from the clostridial family of neurotoxins. We engineered individual parts of clostridial neurotoxins separately and combined them using a strong alpha-helical bundle. We show that combining two identical binding domains of tetanus and botulinum type D neurotoxins, in a sterically defined way by protein stapling, allows enhanced intracellular delivery of molecules into neurons. We also engineered a botulinum neurotoxin type C variant with a duplicated binding domain which increased enzymatic delivery compared to the native type C toxin. We conclude that duplication of the binding parts of tetanus or botulinum neurotoxins will allow production of high avidity agents which could deliver imaging reagents and large therapeutic enzymes into neurons with superior efficiency. Elsevier 2019-12-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7043326/ /pubmed/32140681 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.toxcx.2019.100019 Text en © 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles from Special Issue on Toxins 2019, Edited by:Dr. David Simpson, Dr. Marie Vidailhet, Dr. Matteo Caleo and Dr. Sabine Pellett
Leese, Charlotte
Bresnahan, Rebecca
Doran, Ciara
Simsek, Deniz
Fellows, Alexander D.
Restani, Laura
Caleo, Matteo
Schiavo, Giampietro
Mavlyutov, Timur
Henke, Tina
Binz, Thomas
Davletov, Bazbek
Duplication of clostridial binding domains for enhanced macromolecular delivery into neurons
title Duplication of clostridial binding domains for enhanced macromolecular delivery into neurons
title_full Duplication of clostridial binding domains for enhanced macromolecular delivery into neurons
title_fullStr Duplication of clostridial binding domains for enhanced macromolecular delivery into neurons
title_full_unstemmed Duplication of clostridial binding domains for enhanced macromolecular delivery into neurons
title_short Duplication of clostridial binding domains for enhanced macromolecular delivery into neurons
title_sort duplication of clostridial binding domains for enhanced macromolecular delivery into neurons
topic Articles from Special Issue on Toxins 2019, Edited by:Dr. David Simpson, Dr. Marie Vidailhet, Dr. Matteo Caleo and Dr. Sabine Pellett
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7043326/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32140681
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.toxcx.2019.100019
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