Engineering Stabilized Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor-A Antagonists : Synthesis, Structural Characterization, and Bioactivity of Grafted Analogues of Cyclotides

2008 
Cyclotides are plant derived mini-proteins with compact folded structures and exceptional stability. Their stability derives from a head-to-tail cyclized backbone coupled with a cystine knot arrangement of three-conserved disulfide bonds. Taking advantage of this stable framework we developed novel VEGF-A antagonists by grafting a peptide epitope involved in VEGF-A antagonism onto the stable cyclotide framework. Antagonists of this kind have potential therapeutic applications in diseases where angiogenesis is an important component of disease progression, including cancer and rheumatoid arthritis. A grafted analogue showed biological activity in an in vitro VEGF-A antagonism assay at low micromolar concentration and the in vitro stability of the target epitope was markedly increased using this approach. In general, the stabilization of bioactive peptide epitopes is a significant problem in medicinal chemistry and in the current study we have provided insight into one approach to stabilize these peptides in a biological environment.
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