PEPTIDE HAVING CELL MEMBRANE PENETRATING ACTIVITY
The present invention provides a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity, a transmembrane carrier comprising the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity as an effective component, a transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance, a transfection kit comprising the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity and the target substance, use of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity for the manufacture of a transmembrane complex, use of the transmembrane complex for the manufacture of a medicament, and a method for delivering a target substance into cell interior which comprises administrating to a subject with a transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance to induce transduction of the transmembrane complex into cell interior. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention has a prominent penetrating efficiency as compared with the activities of prior TAT-derived peptides and so the peptide has applications on intracellular delivery in various research fields as well as on therapeutics of specific diseases where targeting of drugs is required at high efficiency. Accordingly, the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity, the transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide combined with a target substance and the method for delivering a target substance into cell interior using the transmembrane complex of the present invention are very useful as drug delivery systems.
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The present invention relates to a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity, a transmembrane carrier comprising the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity as an effective component, a transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance, a transfection kit comprising the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity and the target substance, use of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity for the manufacture of a transmembrane complex, use of the transmembrane complex for the manufacture of a medicament, and a method for delivering a target substance into cell interior which comprises administrating to a subject with a transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance to induce transduction of the transmembrane complex into cell interior.
BACKGROUND ARTRecently, various methods have been developed for delivering macromolecules such as therapeutic drug, peptides and proteins into cells in vitro and in vivo.
In vitro methods include electroporation, membrane fusion with liposomes, high velocity bombardment with DNA-coated microprojectiles, incubation with calcium-phosphate-DNA precipitate, DEAE-dextran mediated transfection, infection with modified viral nucleic acids, and direct micro-injection into single cells. But such methods are of extremely limited usefulness for delivery of proteins.
Delivery of macromolecules into cells in vivo has been accomplished with scrape loading, calcium phosphate precipitates and liposomes. However, these techniques have, up to date, shown limited usefulness for in vivo cellular delivery.
General methods for efficient delivery of biologically active proteins into intact cells, in vitro and in vivo include chemical addition of a lipopeptide (P. Hoffmann et al., 1988) or a basic polymer such as polylysine or polyarginine etc. (W-C. Chen et al., 1978)
Folic acid has been used as a transport moiety (C. P. Leamon and Low, 1991). However, these methods have not proved to be highly reliable or generally useful.
Recently to introduce macromolecules such as a protein into a cell interior, gene therapy becomes in the limelight but this have also problems in that targeting is incorrect. As a alternative, research on protein transduction or protein therapy is actively progressed.
Protein transduction domain (PTD) was first reported that purified human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (“HIV”) TAT protein is taken up from the surrounding medium by adding it to human cells growing in culture medium (Green et al., 1988, Frankel et al., 1988). After this report, drosophila homeotic transcription factor, antennapedia(Antp) (Joliot et al., 1991) and herpes simplex virus-1 DNA-binding protein, VP22 (Elliot et al 1997) were also identified.
In comparison of amino acid sequences of the PTDs such as TAT, Antp and VP22 etc., basic amino acids such as arginine and lysine exist for the most part (TABLE 1) and this sequence potentiates easy approach near to the negatively charged phospholipid bilayer and penetration into the cell interior. Protein sequences having penetrating activity were named as protein transduction domains(PTDs).
In particular, recombinant expression vector was developed by using a peptide containing 11 amino acids of TAT 47-57 and TAT fusion proteins were prepared by linking the TAT peptide to other peptides or proteins and so introduction of full-length protein into intracellular compartment became possible without the limitation of size or function (Nagahara et al., 1988).
As PTDs can be linked with other peptide or proteins to form fusion protein and then be transduced into cell interior, there are many attempts to transduce therapeutic drug, peptide, protein etc. into cell interior using PTDs.
Recently, it has been known for PTDs which do not contain lots of basic amino acid residues. Also, it has been reported that PTDs penetrate phosphoelipid bilayer of cell membrane by helix conformation.
TCTP (translationally controlled tumor protein) is a protein known as IgE-dependent histamine-releasing factor (HRF) as reported by MacDonald et al. (1995). TCTP had been known as tumor-specific protein until 1980' and the synthesis thereof was assumed to be related to proliferative stage of tumor. TCTP was reported as a tumor protein of 21 kDa, p21 in mouse erythroleukemia cell line (Chitpatima et al., 1988). Also, it was revealed that p23, relating to cell growth in Ehrlich ascites tumor is the same as TCTP/HRF (Bohm et al, 1989).
TCTP is frequently found in tumor cell, particularly growing vigorously, and exists in cytoplasm. It is a known protein consisting of 172 amino acids (NCBI accession #P13693 (Homo sapiens)) and shows high homology between species. 45 amino acids at its C-terminal form basic domain. Because such domain has about 46% homology with MAP-1B, microtubule-associated protein, it was also assumed that HRF is a microtubule-associated protein. Gachet, et al. (1997) observed that HRF is distributed consistently along with the cytoskeletal network to some extent using confocal microscope, which suggests that HRF binds to the cytoskeleton.
TCTP expression is characterized by that mRNA is maintained in regular level, but in case that exterior stimulus such as serum exists, it is transformed to polysome to be translated. According to the characteristic, it was named as ‘Translationally Controlled Tumor Protein (TCTP)’ (Thomas et al., 1981; Thomas and Thomas., 1986). It was also reported that TCTP mRNA is suppressed during translation, but when it receives cell division signal, it is activated and translated to protein (Thomas and Thomas, 1986).
TCTP/HRF is considered as a histamine releasing material interacting with basophil or mast cell and related to allergic inflammatory response.
MacDonald, et al. (1995) also found that though HRF is an intracellular protein, HRF in the outside of cells stimulates IgE-sensitized basophils to release histamine (Schroeder, et al., 1996). Schroeder, et al. (1997) observed that HRF can augment the anti-IgE-induced histamine release from all basophils, regardless of the IgE absence, and thus suggested that HRF exerts its function by binding to cell membrane receptors, not by binding with IgE.
The present inventors have previously reported that TCTP/HRF is interacted with third cytoplasmic domain (CD3) of subunit of (Na,K)ATPase thereby suppressing the activity of (Na,K)ATPase (as shown in KR Patent Application No. 10-2001-0027896) (Jung et al., 2004).
At the same time the present inventors reports that TCTP/HRF can pass through cell membrane. Since the amino acid sequence of TCTP/HRF has no the part consisting of plenty of basic amino acids, arginine or lysine, which is a characteristic of representative PTDs, and no similar amino acid sequences to those of other PTDs, the present inventors considered TCTP has a domain which is different to other known PTDs in aspect of the protein structures.
In whole structure of TCTP, N- and C-terminus get loose and exposed and middle part forms a spherical shape.
In prediction of third structure, there are three helixes, wherein first helix (H1) is very short, second (H2) and third helix (H3) are exposed to outside. By H2 and H3 structure of TCTP in Schizosaccharomyces pombe, basic amino acids are distributed to outside of helix (Thaw et al., 2001) and so H2 and H3 were predicted to be related to protein transduction activity. However, by a test result, this helix part had nothing to do with translocation.
Therefore if we identify amino acid sequences with protein transduction function in TCTP/HRF, it may be possible to find new types of PTD, as well as to make a new drug delivery system though a novel vector development using these.
The present inventors made a constant effort for looking for PTD in TCTP and, as a result, isolated protein transduction domain composed of very different amino acids in comparison with well-known PTDs. On the basis of this result, the present inventors have established the present invention by confirming that this domain shows remarkably high cell penetrating activity than well-known PTDs.
DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION Technical ProblemIt is an object of the present invention to provide a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity, a transmembrane carrier comprising the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity as an effective component, a transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance, a transfection kit comprising the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity and the target substance, use of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity for the manufacture of a transmembrane complex, use of the transmembrane complex for the manufacture of a medicament, and a method for delivering a target substance into cell interior which comprises administrating to a subject with a transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance to induce transduction of the transmembrane complex into cell interior.
Technical SolutionThis invention provides a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity, composed of the following amino acid sequence:
R1-R2-R3-R4-R5-R6-R7-R8-R9-R10
In the above formula,
R1 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from M, A, Q, C, F, L or W,
R2 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from I or A,
R3 may be one amino acid selected from I or A,
R4 may be one amino acid selected from Y, A, F, S or R,
R5 may be one amino acid selected from R, A or K,
R6 may be one amino acid selected from D, A, I or R,
R7 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from L, K, A, E or R,
R8 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from I, K or A,
R9 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from A, S, E, Y or T,
R10 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from A, H, K or E, and
if R10 is K or H, the amino acid(s) selected from K, KK, R, RR or HH may be added thereto.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the amino acid sequence may be SEQ ID No.: 1.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the amino acid sequence may be SEQ ID Nos.: 2-7.
Also, in one embodiment of the present invention, the amino acid sequence may be an amino acid sequence which one amino acid of SEQ ID No.: 2 is substituted with alanine. The above amino acid sequence may be, for example, an amino acid sequence selected from SEQ ID Nos.: 8-16, particularly SEQ ID No.: 13.
In addition, in an embodiment of the present invention, the amino acid sequence may be an amino acid sequence selected from SEQ ID Nos.: 20-54. The above sequence may be, for example, an amino acid sequence selected from SEQ ID Nos.: 22, 26, 27 or SEQ ID Nos.: 31-54.
In the present invention, ‘cell membrane penetrating protein domain’ means protein sequence having penetrating activity into cell interior (cytoplasm, nucleus) across plasma membrane.
A peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention is a novel cell membrane penetrating protein domain that has no similarity in sequences with well-known TAT, VP22 and Antp PTDs (Protein Transduction Domains).
The present invention provides a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity consisting of the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID No.: 1. The present invention also provides a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity consisting of one amino acid sequence selected from SEQ ID Nos.: 2-7.
According to one example of the present invention, the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity consisting of the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID No.: 1, 2, 3 or 4 shows excellent cell penetrating activity in comparison with conventional TAT, and intracellular penetrating efficiency shows a rapidly increasing mode when treatment concentration becomes high and incubation time becomes long.
In detail, when cell penetrating activity was measured by using the residues of TCTP from 1st to 10th[TCTP(1-10), SEQ ID No.: 1], cell penetrating activity of TCTP(1-10) show over 3 times activity when treated for 15 minutes in 50 μM and 6 times activity when treated for 15 minutes in 100 μM, compared to that of TAT. In case of treatment for 2 hours, cell penetrating activity at concentration of 50 μM and 100 μM of TCTP(1-10) were higher than those of TAT about 29 times and 30 times, respectively.
Also, compared with the case of treatment for 15 minutes, cell penetrating activity showed an increased fashion in the incubation time of 2 hours.
In addition, a peptide comprising amino acid residues of TCTP(1-9)(SEQ ID No.: 2), TCTP(1-8)(SEQ ID No.: 3) or TCTP(2-10) (SEQ ID No.: 4) showed more excellent penetrating activity than well-known TAT(47-58) peptide. Of these, cell penetrating activity was excellent in the order of TCTP(1-10)(SEQ ID No.: 1), TCTP(1-9)(SEQ ID No.: 2), TCTP(1-8)(SEQ ID No.: 3) and TCTP(2-10)(SEQ ID No.: 4), and when 1st amino acid of TCTP was existing, cell penetrating activity was more excellent.
Length of the peptides, as a common length of cell membrane penetrating protein domain accepted in this art, may vary within the scope of, preferably, 9-15 residues, and more preferably, 9-10 residues.
A peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention may be prepared by artificial synthesis or by isolating the sequence of TCTP(1-10)(SEQ ID No.: 1), TCTP(1-9)(SEQ ID No.: 2), TCTP(1-8)(SEQ ID No.: 3) or TCTP(2-10)(SEQ ID No.: 4) from TCTP.
Synthesis of the peptide of the present invention may be performed, for example, by using an instrument or by using genetic engineering.
In case of synthesis by using an instrument, synthesis can be performed by using Fmoc solid-phase method on automatic peptide synthesizer (PeptrEX-R48, Peptron). After purifying the synthesized peptide from resin, the peptide can be purified and analyzed by reverse-phase HPLC (Prominence LC-20AB, Shimadzu, Japan) with Shiseido capcell pak C18 analytic RP column. After synthesis is completed, the peptide can be identified by a mass spectrometer (HP 1100 Series LC/MSD, Hewlett-Packard, Roseville, USA).
In case of isolation by genetic engineering, nucleic acid sequences corresponding to a desired peptide can be introduced into recombinant vector for protein expression, then the expression of peptide coding region can be induced by IPTG in E. coli bacteria like a BL21(λDE3) or BL21(λDE3)pLys, that is deficient in proteases, and the peptide can be purified.
The present invention also provides a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity, composed of the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID Nos.: 8-16.
According to an example of the present invention, among the amino acid sequences that one amino acid of SEQ ID No.: 2 is substituted with alanine, alanine-substituent of 6th residue, aspartic acid(SEQ ID No.: 13), showed 2.5 times increased penetrating activity than WT(wild type) peptide at a low concentration of 10 μM and alanine-substituents of 5th and 7-9th residue(R, L, I, S)(SEQ ID Nos.: 12, 14-16) showed a little decreased but still showed activity. Activity of alanine-substituents of 1st-4th residues (M, I, I, Y)(SEQ ID Nos.: 8-11) was suddenly decreased but maintained functionally like a WT peptide. Therefore, a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention comprises the peptide consisting of one amino acid sequence selected from SEQ ID Nos.: 8-16.
The present invention also provides a peptides having cell membrane penetrating activity, consisting of one amino acid sequence selected from SEQ ID No.: 22, 26, 27, or 31-54.
In an example of the present invention, the peptides of SEQ ID Nos.: 20-30 were prepared by deletion, substitution or addition of one or more amino acids in SEQ ID No.: 1. As a result, the peptides consisting of SEQ ID No.: 22, 26 or 27 showed better penetrating activity than TAT (100 μM). On the basis of these penetration data, the peptides of SEQ ID Nos.: 31-45 were synthesized repeatedly and these all peptides showed better penetrating activity than TAT in 10 μM. On the basis of above data, the peptides of SEQ ID Nos.: 46-54 were prepared as various mutant forms of SEQ ID No.: 1, then measured for cell penetrating activity. As a result, the peptide of SEQ ID No.: 49 had excellent activity compared with TAT and the peptides of SEQ ID Nos.: 46-54 showed a similar or better activity compared with TAT and excellent activity compared with TCTP(1-10)(SEQ ID No.: 1). Therefore, a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention comprises the peptides consisting of SEQ ID Nos.: 22, 26, 27 and 31-54.
Length of the peptides, as a common length of cell membrane penetrating protein domain accepted in this art, may vary within the scope of preferably 5-15 residues, and more preferably 8-10 residues.
The peptide of the present invention may be prepared by artificial synthesis or by isolating the sequence of TCTP(1-10)(SEQ ID No.: 1), TCTP(1-9)(SEQ ID No.: 2), TCTP(1-8) (SEQ ID No.: 3) or TCTP(2-10)(SEQ ID No.: 4) and modifying these sequences.
Synthesis of the peptides may be prepared by same synthesis methods as described above.
The present invention also provides a transmembrane carrier comprising the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity as an effective component. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity provides a use as a transmembrane carrier for penetrating target substance across plasma membrane.
In addition, the present invention provides a transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance.
The term ‘target substance’ of the present invention means a molecule that may be related to a regulation of physiological activity, made a pharmacological action or maintained a biological activity in intracellular compartment.
Target substance of the present invention, for example, may comprise nucleic acid including DNA and RNA, chemical compound such as drug, carbohydrate, lipid or glycolipid etc. as non-protein range molecule, and enzyme, regulation factor, growth factor, antibody, cytoskeletal factor etc. as protein range molecule.
A peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention may be linked to one or more target substances by physically/chemically covalent bond or non-covalent bond, or by mediators in incorporated or fused forms.
In detail, if the target substance is a non-protein range molecule, a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention may be linked to the target substance by covalent bond, then the complex may be exposed to target cell group. In another example, the target substances may be non-covalently linked to a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention. For instance, if the target substance is a nucleic acid, it may be incorporated with a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention, in forms of lipid based vehicle, then exposed to target cell group.
In case that the target substance is a protein, fusion protein incorporated with a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention can be prepared by obtaining cDNA of the protein (the target substance) through PCR and cloning cDNA using vectors. If it is impossible, the protein may be fused chemically. For example, fusion protein can be prepared by connecting the target substance to linker, then reacting with the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity to form linkage.
In particular, when the target substance is a protein, the complex may be penetrated in forms of fusion protein. In this case, cell penetrating complex of the present invention may be prepared as follows.
First, recombinant expression vector is prepared to generate a fusion gene encoding a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity-target substances conjugate.
Nucleic acids encoding above fusion protein include the nucleic acid sequence encoding a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity and the nucleic acid sequence encoding a protein as target substance. For example, these nucleic acid sequences may comprise sequences consisting of SEQ ID Nos.: 17-18 or 55-81.
Nucleic acid sequences of SEQ ID Nos.: 17-18 or 55-81 are as follows.
Since codons encoding one amino acid are several, nucleic acid sequences encoding the peptide of the present invention include all nucleic acid sequence encoding the peptide of the present invention besides nucleic acid sequences listed in above table.
Recombinant expression vector of the present invention may include conventional promoter for expression, termination factor, selection marker, reporter gene, tag sequence, restriction enzyme recognitions site, multi-cloning site and so on.
Transfection methods to host using recombinant expression vector of the present invention may be a heat shock or electroporation etc. which is known in the art.
After fusion proteins are expressed under proper conditions in transfected host cell as above, fusion proteins, which consist of a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity and a protein as target substance, may be purified by conventional methods known in the art.
In addition, the present invention provides a transfection kit comprising the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity and the target substance. Transfection kits are optimized systems to introduce easily DNA/RNA to intracellular compartment of mammalian cell. There are up to now calcium-phosphate method, methods using lipid complex or dextran complex, but limitations are that efficiency of these methods is 1/106- 1/102 and depend on cell type. To overcome these limitations, transfection kits using the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity, may be utilized.
The transfection kit of the present invention may further comprise a binding factor combining the peptide with the target substance. The binding factor means specific DNA/RNA sequences including transcriptional factor, virus protein, or whole body or a part of protein that are capable to bind to target substance. For example, Gal4 is a DNA binding factor. Gal4 is a transcriptional factor widely used in eukaryote, prokaryote and virus. DNA/RNA binding factors may be used by vector expressing PTDs and fusion proteins in vivo and vitro. Also, incorporation between DNA/RNA binding factors and PTDs may be accomplished by chemical interaction, physical interaction or noncovalent interaction.
If fusion complexes between a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention and DNA/RNA are treated outside the cells, it can be overcome both efficiency and limitation depending on the cell type. Using both a peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention and DNA/RNA binding factors, it is capable that DNA/RNA is introduced into cytoplasm and nucleus of various cells in vivo and in vitro. Particularly, introduction method can be accomplished by various route including intramuscular, intraperitoneal, intravenous, oral, subcutaneous, intracutaneous, intranasal introduction and inhalation.
In addition, target substance may include one or more biological regulation substances selected from a group consisting of protein, lipid, carbohydrate or chemical and transfection kits of the present invention can introduce above target substance into cytoplasm and nucleus of various cells in vivo and in vitro. Fusion between PTD and target substance can be accomplished by chemical, physical covalent interacation or noncovalent interaction.
Transfection kit of the present invention provides new technology about gene therapy and DNA/RNA vaccine according to the methods of the present invention and can express transiently or permanently and be used in clinical applications such as gene therapy and DNA/RNA vaccine as well as basic research.
Also, the present invention provides a use of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity for the manufacture of a transmembrane complex and a method for preparing transmembrane complexes by combining target substance with the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity.
In addition, the present invention provides a use of the transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance for the manufacture of a medicament and a method for manufacturing a medicament which comprises mixing the transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance, with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. The pharmaceutically acceptable carrier is well known to a skilled artisan, and the skilled artisan can select and use the pharmaceutically acceptable carrier which is proper for introduction to a living body.
Further, the present invention provides a method for delivering a target substance into cell interior which comprises administrating to a subject with a transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance to induce transduction of the transmembrane complex into cell interior.
If the target substance is non-protein range molecule, it may be covalently attached to the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention, and the complex may be exposed to target cell group. In another example, the target substance may be non-covalently attached to the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention, for example, if the target substance is a nucleic acid, the complex may be exposed to target cell group in forms of lipid based vehicle incorporated with the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention.
The ‘subject’ may be mammal including human. The transmembrane complex can be administrated by various route including intramuscular, intraperitoneal, intravenous, oral, subcutaneous, intracutaneous, mucosal administration and inhalation.
Dose of the transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance, is variable according to a therapeutically effective amount of the target substance and penetrating activity of the peptide, and so it is not limited to a specific dose. Only, for example, if the target substance is a nucleic acid, the dose of target substance may be 10˜1000 μg/kg and the dose of the peptide of the present invention may be 0.1 mg-10 mg/kg.
In addition, the present invention provides a method for treating related diseases by administrating to a subject with the transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity combined with a target substance thereby introducing the target substance into a cell.
The kind of the disease desired to treatment may be varied depending on the target substance intended to administrate into cell interior.
The ‘subject’ may be mammal including human. The transmembrane complex can be administrated by various route including intramuscular, intraperitoneal, intravenous, oral, subcutaneous, intracutaneous, mucosal administration and inhalation.
Also, the present invention provides a nucleic acid sequence encoding the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity. For example, the present invention provides a nucleic acid encoding the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity, consisting of an amino acid sequences selected from SEQ ID No.: 1, 2, 22, 26, 27 or 31-54.
The nucleic acid may be DNA or RNA of single chain or double chain and be prepared by synthesizing artificially or isolating from organism-derived TCTP genes. For example, the nucleic acids encoding the peptides consisting of SEQ ID Nos.: 1, 2, 22, 26, 27 or 31-54, represent the nucleic acid sequences of SEQ ID Nos.: 17-18, or 55-81, respectively.
Since codons encoding one amino acid are several, nucleic acid sequences encoding the peptide of the present invention include all nucleic acid sequences encoding the peptide of the present invention, and are not limited to the nucleic acid sequences listed in above table. For example, sequence encoding alanine in amino acid sequence may be gca, gcc, gcg or gct.
The peptide of the present invention having cell membrane penetrating activity has a prominent effect in delivery as compared with TAT-derived peptide. Thus, the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention, the transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide combined with a target substance, and the method for delivering a target substance into a cell using the transmembrane complex has applications on intracellular delivery in various research fields as well as on therapeutics of specific diseases where targeting of drugs is required at high efficiency. Accordingly, the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention, the transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide combined with a target substance, and the method for delivering a target substance into a cell using the transmembrane complex is very useful as drug delivery systems.
In order that the invention described herein may be more fully understood, the following examples are set forth. It should be understood that these examples are for illustrative purposes only and are not to be construed as limiting this invention in any manner.
Advantageous EffectsThe peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention has a prominent penetrating efficiency as compared with the activities of prior TAT-derived peptides and so the peptide has applications on intracellular delivery in various research fields as well as on therapeutics of specific diseases where targeting of drugs is required high efficiently. Accordingly, the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention, the transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide combined with a target substance, and the method for delivering a target substance into a cell using the transmembrane complex is very useful as drug delivery systems.
In order to confirm the region of the TCTP acting as PTD, various deletion constructs were prepared and then used in the experiment as follows.
1) Isolation and Purification of Deletion Forms of TCTPTo overexpress each of those deletion forms of TCTP (
2) Cell Culture and Treatment with the Protein
BEAS-2B cell was treated with the deletion form of TCTP at the concentration of 15 ug/ml for 1 hour or 24 hours. Then, supernatants and cell lysates were obtained and western blotted with anti-TCTP antibodies (
As shown in
Therefore, it could be known that PDT of TCTP exists in N-terminus. Particularly, since Del-N11HRF was still existed in cell supernatant 24 hours later (Lane 7), it seems that TCTP 1-10 plays a role as PDT.
In addition, it was examined whether TCTP proteins of the present invention could be transferred to cellular interior for a short time, 5 minutes or 30 minutes. The experiment was performed by same method as the above (
As shown in
Thus, N-terminus containing TCTP proteins of present invention can be transferred into cell interior for a short time, only several minutes to several tens minutes.
Example 2 Confirmation of Cell Penetrating Efficiency of the Peptide of the Present InventionAs shown in Example 1, in order to confirm that the N-terminus of TCTP can function as a PTD, the peptides consisting of N-terminus of TCTP were constructed and examined for cell penetrating efficiency.
1) Synthesis of Various Peptides Corresponding N-Terminus Amino acid of TCTP
TCTP-derived peptides and control peptide, TAT 48-57 were synthesized as follow.
N-terminus of each peptides was labeled with fluorescence dye, rhodamine and C-terminus was protected. Peptide purity (>95%) was determined by HPLC. Syntersis of the peptides was requested to PEPTRON, Inc.
Negative control was a fluorescence dye, rhodamine (Molecular Probe) used to label in all peptides.
2) Cell Culture and Incubation of PeptidesHeLa cell line (ATCC) was propagated in DMEM (GIBCO) supplemented with 10% FBS (GIBCO) and 100 units/mL penicillin-streptomycin. Cells were grown in a 5% CO2 incubator at 37° C.
HeLa cells were cultured in 48-well plate until they were 70˜80% grown up before a day of the experiment. The cells were washed with DMEM of 37° C. twice, and TCTP-derived peptides synthesized in Example 2-1) were treated to the culture medium in a dose dependent manner (0, 1, 5, 10, 50, 100 μM), then the cells was incubated for 15 minutes or 2 hours in an CO2 incubator at 37° C.
After the incubation, the cells were washed in cool PBS three times and immediately measured by a microplate fluorescence reader (BIO-TEK instruments, Inc., Vermont, USA) at emission 530 nm and excitation 590 nm for a measurement of rhodamine of intracellular uptake marker. The sensitivity of reader was set at 100 as a basic mode, but was lowered to 75 if the fluorescent signals were too strong. All experiments were conducted in triplet repeats for reproducibility (
As shown in
TCTP (1-10), (1-9), (1-8) peptides of the present invention were translocated not in 1-10 μM but in 50-100 μM at 15 minutes (
In
TCTP (2-10) peptide was not translocated at a concentration of 1 μM to 10 μM, but was more efficiently translocated at 100 μM after 15 minutes treatment of this peptide. After 2 hours, this peptide has similar cell membrane penetrating activity to control peptide, TAT(48-57), and was more efficiently translocated at 100 μM than control peptide.
So, it could be confirmed that TCTP (1-10), (1-9), (1-8) and (2-10) peptides having cell membrane penetrating activity of the prevent invention had superior ability than well-known PTD, TAT in their translocation efficiency.
For TCTP-derived peptide, it had been shown a sudden increase in translocation ability at the high concentration and these results might be caused by a difference in translocation mechanisms.
Consequently, it could be confirmed that TCTP (1-10), (1-9), (1-8) and (2-10) peptides having cell membrane penetrating activity of the present invention had superior ability than well-known PTD, TAT in their translocation efficiency. From among these peptides, translocation efficiency was superior in the order of TCTP (1-10), (1-9), (1-8) and (2-10) peptides, and existence of methionine (1St amino acid residue) of TCTP N-terminus was important.
Example 3 Identification of Intracellular Translocation of TCTP-derived Peptide by Fluorescence MicroscopeThe intracellular translocation of the peptide was identified by fluorescence microscope.
HeLa cells were treated with TCTP (1-9) (SEQ ID No.: 2) at a concentration of 10 μM and 100 μM by the same method of Example 2-2). A point of difference was that HeLa cells were seeded in 12 well-plate covered a glass since the plastic plate had a property of fluorescence interference. After washing, cells on cover glass attached slide glass were observed (
As shown in
In order to confirm that substituent forms of the present peptide can function as a PTD, substituents of the peptide were constructed and examined for cell penetrating efficiency.
1) Construction of Peptide SubstituentsSerial substituents of TCTP(1-9)(SEQ ID No.: 2) with alanine were synthesized as follows.
N-terminus of each peptide was labeled with fluorescence dye, rhodamine and C-terminus was protected. Peptide purity (>95%) was determined by HPLC. Synthesis of peptides of present invention was requested to PEPTRON, Inc.
2) Cell Culture and Incubation of PeptidesHeLa cell line was propagated in DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS and 100 units/mL penicillin-streptomycin. Cells were grown in a 5% CO2 incubator at 37° C.
HeLa cells were cultured in 48-well plate until they were 70˜80% grown up before a day of the experiment. The cells were washed with DMEM of 37° C. twice, and TCTP-derived peptides synthesized in Example 4-1) were treated to the culture medium in a dose dependent manner (0, 1, 10, 100 μM), then the cells was incubated for 15 minutes or 2 hours in an CO2 incubator at 37° C.
After the incubation, the cells were washed in cool PBS three times and immediately measured by a microplate fluorescence reader at emission 530 nm and excitation 590 nm for a measurement of rhodamine of intracellular uptake marker. The sensitivity of reader was set at 100 as a basic, but was lowered to 75 if fluorescent signals were strong. All experiments were conducted in triplet repeats for reproducibility (
As shown in
On the other hand, alanine substituents for amino acid residue 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 (each R, D, L, I, S) of TCTP(1-9) (each SEQ ID Nos.: 12, 13, 14, 15, 16) were declined in uptake, down by about 50 percent but we judged that these peptides were still maintained in translocation activity. Thus, it was known that four amino acids (M, I, I, Y) of the N-terminus of TCTP were necessary in cell penetrating activity.
Meanwhile, when the sensitivity of KC4 plate reader was set down to 75, we could not analyze the result of cell penetrating activity at relatively low concentration of 1 or 10 nM, so sensitivity of reader was fixed at 100 (
As shown in
Natural peptides of TCTP(1-10), (1-9), (1-8), (2-10) were efficiently translocated at a high concentration, while these peptides had lower efficiency than control peptide, TAT at a relatively low concentration of 1 μM and 10 μM (EXAMPLE 2). However, from the above results it was shown that analogues of deletion, addition or substitution of 6th residue had a excellent penetrating activity at a low concentration.
From all of the above results, four amino acids (M, I, I, Y) on N-terminus of TCTP played a necessary role in cell penetrating activity and particularly alanine substituent for 6th residue, aspartic acid increased suddenly cell penetrating activity at a low concentration (10 μM). At this time, we assumed that which penetrating activity was increased at a low concentration but decreased at a high concentration was due to low solubility of alanine substituent with hydrophobic property.
Example 5 Cell Penetrating Activity of Mutant PeptidesAs shown in EXAMPLE 4, it was confirmed that substituent peptides of the present invention had a cell membrane penetrating activity. So to identify which mutant forms of the present peptides have penetrating activity, we examined translocation efficiency of mutant peptides.
1) Construction of Mutant PeptidesFrom the results of EXAMPLE 4, various mutant peptides were constructed with the frame of TCTP (1-10)(SEQ ID No.: 1).
N-terminus of each peptide was labeled with fluorescence dye, FITC and C-terminus was protected. Peptide purity (>95%) was determined by HPLC. Synthesis of the peptides of the present invention was requested to PEPTRON, Inc.
2) Cell Culture and Incubation of PeptidesHeLa cell line was propagated in DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS and 100 units/mL penicillin-streptomycin. Cells were grown in a 5% CO2 incubator at 37° C.
HeLa cells were cultured in 6-well plate until they were 7080% grown up before a day of the experiment. The cells were washed with DMEM of 37° C. twice, and TCTP-derived peptides synthesized in Example 5-1) were treated to the culture medium in a dose dependent manner (0, 1, 10, 100 μM), then the cells was incubated for 2 hours in an CO2 incubator at 37° C.
After the incubation, the cells were washed in cool PBS two times and treated with 1 mg/ml trypsin for 15 min at 37° C. to digest peptides attached on cell membrane and washed in PBS twice again. Then, the cells were analyzed by FACS at emission 510 nm and excitation 530 nm for a measurement of FITC of intracellular uptake marker (
3) Relationship between Peptide Variants and Cell Penetrating Activity
When mutant peptides were designed, each position of the residues can be substituted with all 20 amino acids like alanine substitution, but this is inefficient to search the best effective mutant out of all peptides because charge and isoelectric point of whole peptide after change of other neighboring position of amino acid also have to be considered. Thus we tried new modification on the basis of the results deduced after primary changes then we designed new variant peptides to verify the role of crucial amino acid. New mutant peptides and sequences were arranged in the table at EXAMPLE 5-1). We intended to explain the mutated position easily by giving a number from 1 to X (from N-terminus) to each ten amino acid of wild type(WT) (SEQ ID No.: 1). To increase the solubility and binding efficiency of WT to cell membrane (in the same reason of use of polyarginine and polylysine), we did the lysine substitution at the position of WT-X and simultaneous addition of lysine at the same position (SEQ ID No.: 20), two lysine substitutions at the position of WT-VII, VIII (SEQ ID No.: 21) and two lysine additions to WT (SEQ ID No.: 26)(SEQ ID No.: 27). Only SEQ ID No.: 26 and SEQ ID No.: 27 of these variants increased cell penetrating activity. According to results comparing and analysing mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) when MFI of WT at the concentration of 10 μM was set to 1, TAT, SEQ ID No.: 26 and SEQ ID NOS.: 27 were 6.1 times, 6.04 times and 1.73 times higher than WT at the concentration of 10 μM, respectively, and TAT, SEQ ID No.: 26 and SEQ ID No.: 27 were 94.75 times, 144.6 times and 342.9 times higher than WT at the concentration of 100 μM in cell penetrating activity, respectively. Therefore variant peptides of all 12 amino acids adding two lysines at C-terminus of WT was maintained in next designed variant peptides (from SEQ ID No.: 31) and substitution with other basic amino acids than lysine and change of number of basic amino acids were tested (SEQ ID Nos.: 48-52). As a result, additions of 1 or 2 basic amino acid at the C-terminus showed higher efficiency than WT.
To analyze the role of sulfur of methionine in the position of WT-I, we substituted methionine(M) with glutamine(O) or cysteine(C)(comparison with SEQ ID No.: 23 and SEQ ID Nos.: 24-25). As a result, sulfur didn't play a crucial role and so to test the role of hydrophobicity of methionine, methionine was substituted by phenylalanine(F), leucine(L) or tryptophan(W) (comparison with SEQ ID No.: 31 and SEQ ID No.: 34-36, comparison with SEQ ID No.: 32 and SEQ ID No.: 38, comparison with SEQ ID No.: 33 and SEQ ID No.: 37, comparison with SEQ ID No.: 39 and SEQ ID No.: 40, comparison with SEQ ID No.: 41 and SEQ ID No.: 42, comparison with SEQ ID No.: 43 and SEQ ID No.: 44, comparison with SEQ ID No.: 46 and SEQ ID No.: 47). Consequently, cell penetrating activities of SEQ ID Nos.: 37, 38 and 39 were lower than SEQ ID No.: 34 at the concentration of 100 μM but were 52.0 times, 55.6 times and 25.0 times higher than WT in the concentration of 10 μM, respectively, and so these peptides had an excellent translocation efficiency in comparison with SEQ ID No.: 31 (29 times higher than WT). As results of SEQ ID No.: 38 in comparison with SEQ ID No.: 32 and SEQ ID No.: 37 in comparison with SEQ ID No.: 33, substitution for tryptophan did not increase translocation efficiency. This result might be related to cytotoxicity of tryptophan substituents at the concentration of 100 μM (
To test the role of tyrosine(Y) at the position of WT-IV, by substituting tyrosine with phenylalanine(F) having no hydroxyl group but isostericity like a tyrosine or serine(S) having hydroxyl group like a tyrosine, we tested the importance of hydrophobicity and the action of hydroxyl group and so on in this position. SEQ ID Nos.: 22 and 25 were 19.63 times and 0.91 times higher than WT at 10 μM and 216.75 times and 1.81 times higher at 100 μM, respectively. From this result, it was known that increase of hydrophobicity enhanced cell penetrating activity in this position, and so after this experiment we introduced phenylalanine in the position of WT-IV of peptide variants (From SEQ ID No.: 31).
We compared substituents for basic amino acid by substituting arginine(R) with lysine (comparison between SEQ ID No.: 31 and 43, and between SEQ ID No.: 36 and 44) or alanine (comparison between SEQ ID No.: 31 and 45 and between SEQ ID No.: 35 and 53) in the position of WT-V. As a result, translocation efficiency of SEQ ID No.: 31 (26.77 times increase in comparison with WT) was lower than SEQ ID No.: 43 (12.1 times increase) and efficiency of SEQ ID No.: 36 (18.4 times increase in comparison with WT) was lower than SEQ ID No.: 44 (15.04 times increase) at 10 μM. Translocation efficiency of SEQ ID No.: 45 (11.47 times increase in comparison with WT) and SEQ ID No.: 53 (8.24 times increase in comparison with WT) was lower than SEQ ID No.: 31 and 35 (29.53 times increase) at 10 μM. From these results, we thought that maintainance of the arginine at position of WT-V had advantages.
Aspartic acid at the position of WT-VI, because SEQ ID No.: 13 had a good efficiency at the low concentration (EXAMPLE 4), was substituted by alanine or isoleucine to increase hydrophobicity. In comparison between SEQ ID No.: 31 (WT-VI:I) and 33 (WT-VI:A), translocation efficiencies of both was similarly increased at 100 μM but since increased penetrating activity of SEQ ID No.: 31 (29 times increase in comparison with WT) was far better than SEQ ID No.: 33 (3.2 times increase in comparison with WT) at 10 μM, isoleucine substitution was more effective than alanine substitution. From these results, after this experiment, isoleucine was introduced at the position of WT-VI of peptide variant (from SEQ ID No.: 31, 34-36, 39).
When leucine and isoleucine at the position of WT-VII and VIII were substituted by alanine respectively (SEQ ID No.: 14 & 15), cell penetrating activity was decreased and when both were substituted by basic amino acids, this activity was decreased twice (in the comparison between SEQ ID No.: 1 and 21) and when only leucine at the position of WT-VII were substituted by glutamic acid(E) having negative charge with strong hydrophilicity, this activity was decreased to same degree with alanine substituent (in the comparison between SEQ ID No.: 1 and 29) and thus it was concluded that most effective amino acids in both positions were leucine and isoleucine.
Serine at the position of WT-IX, when SEQ ID No.: 39 (WT-IX:Y) and 41 (WT-IX:T) substituted by each tyrosine and threonine only at this position were compare with SEQ ID No.: 31 (WT-IX:S) in cell penetrating activity, should be maintained for the best effect. Meanwhile in all case of substitution for tryptophan instead of methionine at the position of WT-I, efficiency of SEQ ID No.: 36 (WT-IX:S) was stronger than SEQ ID No.: 40 (WT-IX:Y) and SEQ ID No.: 42 (WT-IX:T) only at 10 μM.
It was effective to maintain histidine(H) at the position of WT-X. In comparison cell penetrating activity between SEQ ID No.: 1 and 2 (deletion of histidine from SEQ ID No.: 1), SEQ ID No.: 1 was more effective than SEQ ID No.: 2 at the concentration of 50 μM (See
To confirm whether cell penetrating activity of the peptides of present invention was due to membrane weakness as a result of cytotoxicity, we measured cytotoxicity as follows. HeLa cells were cultured in 96-well plate until they were 70% grown up before a day of the experiment. Control TAT 48-57 and the mutant peptides at concentrations of 0, 1, 10, 100 μM were treated to DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS for 24 and 48 hours. After 2 hours in addition of 10 μl of CCK-8 to each well, absorbance at 450 nm was measured by KC4 plate reader (
Claims
1. A peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity, composed of the following amino acid sequence:
- R1-R2-R3-R4-R5-R6-R7-R8-R9-R10
- In the above formula,
- R1 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from M, A, Q, C, F, L or W,
- R2 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from I or A,
- R3 may be one amino acid selected from I or A,
- R4 may be one amino acid selected from Y, A, F, S or R,
- R5 may be one amino acid selected from R, A or K,
- R6 may be one amino acid selected from D, A, I or R,
- R7 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from L, K, A, E or R,
- R8 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from I, K or A,
- R9 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from A, S, E, Y or T,
- R10 may be deleted or one amino acid selected from A, H, K or E, and
- if R10 is K or H, the amino acid(s) selected from K, KK, R, RR or HH may be added thereto.
2. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 1, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 1
3. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 1, wherein the amino acid sequence is one selected from SEQ ID No.: 2, SEQ ID No.: 3, SEQ ID No.: 4, SEQ ID No.: 5, SEQ ID No.: 6, SEQ ID No.: 7 or SEQ ID No.: 13.
4. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 1, wherein the amino acid sequence is one selected from SEQ ID No.: 20, SEQ ID No.: 21, SEQ ID No.: 22, SEQ ID No.: 23, SEQ ID No.: 24, SEQ ID No.: 25, SEQ ID No.: 26, SEQ ID No.: 27, SEQ ID No.: 28, SEQ ID No.: 29, SEQ ID No.: 30, SEQ ID No.: 31, SEQ ID No.: 32, SEQ ID No.: 33, SEQ ID No.: 34, SEQ ID No.: 35, SEQ ID No.: 36, SEQ ID No.: 37, SEQ ID No.: 38, SEQ ID No.: 39, SEQ ID No.: 40, SEQ ID No.: 41, SEQ ID No.: 42, SEQ ID No.: 43, SEQ ID No.: 44, SEQ ID No.: 45, SEQ ID No.: 46, SEQ ID No.: 47, SEQ ID No.: 48, SEQ ID No.: 49, SEQ ID No.: 50, SEQ ID No.: 51, SEQ ID No.: 52, SEQ ID No.: 53 or SEQ ID No.: 54.
5. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 22.
6. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 26.
7. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 27.
8. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 31.
9. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 32.
10. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 33.
11. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 34.
12. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 35.
13. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 36.
14. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 37.
15. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 38.
16. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 39.
17. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 40.
18. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 41.
19. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 42.
20. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 43.
21. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 44.
22. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 45.
23. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 46.
24. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 47.
25. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 48.
26. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 49.
27. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 50.
28. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 51.
29. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 52.
30. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 53.
31. The peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence is SEQ ID No.: 54.
32. A transmembrane carrier comprising the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 1 as an effective component.
33. A transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 1 combined with a target substance.
34. The transmembrane complex of claim 33, wherein the target substance is one or more selected from nucleic acid, drug, chemical compound, carbohydrate, lipid, glycolipid, enzyme, regulating factor, growth factor or antibody.
35. A transfection kit comprising the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 1 and a target substance.
36. The transfection kit of claim 35, wherein the transfection kit further comprises a binding factor combining the peptide with the target substance.
37. Use of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 1 for the manufacture of a transmembrane complex.
38. A method for preparing a transmembrane complex by combining a target substance with the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 1.
39. Use of a transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 1 combined with a target substance for the manufacture of a medicament.
40. A method for manufacturing a medicament which comprises mixing a transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 1 combined with a target substance, with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
41. A method for delivering a target substance into cell interior which comprises administrating to a subject with a transmembrane complex consisting of the peptide having cell membrane penetrating activity according to claim 1 combined with a target substance to induce transduction of the transmembrane complex into cell interior.
42. A nucleic acid cording one amino acid sequence selected from SEQ ID No.: 1, 2, 22, 26, 27, or 31-54.
43. The nucleic acid of claim 42, wherein the nucleic acid is one selected from SEQ ID No.: 17, 18, or 55-81 respectively.
Type: Application
Filed: Feb 20, 2007
Publication Date: Jul 1, 2010
Applicant: EWHA UNIVERSITY-INDUSTRY COLLABORATION FOUNDATION (Seoul)
Inventors: Kyunglim Lee (Seoul), Moonhee Kim (Seoul), Miyoung Kim (Seoul), Youngjoo Kwon (Seoul)
Application Number: 12/280,077
International Classification: A61K 38/08 (20060101); C07K 7/06 (20060101); C12N 9/00 (20060101); C07H 21/00 (20060101); A61P 43/00 (20060101);