Design and Characterization of Endosomal‐pH‐Responsive Coiled Coils for Constructing an Artificial Membrane Fusion System

2011 
A weakly acidic pH-responsive polypeptide is believed to have the potential for an endosome escape function in a polypeptide-triggered delivery system. For constructing a membrane fusion device with pH-responsiveness, we have designed novel polypeptides that are capable of forming an α2 coiled coil structure. Circular dichroism spectroscopy reveals that a polypeptide, AP-LZ(EH5), with a Glu and His salt-bridge pair at a staggered position in the hydrophobic core forms a stable coiled coil structure only at endosomal pH values (pH 5.0 to 5.5). On the basis of their endosomal-pH responsiveness, a boronic acid/polypeptide conjugate (BA-H5-St) was also designed as a pilot molecule to construct a pH-responsive, one-way membrane fusion system with a sugarlike compound (phosphatidylinositol: PI)-containing liposome as a target. Membrane fusion behavior was characterized by lipid-mixing, inner-leaflet lipid-mixing, and contents-mixing assays. These studies reveal that membrane fusion is clearly observed when the pH of the experimental system is changed from 7.4 (physiological condition) to 5.0 (endosomal condition).
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