Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Bernard, E;Parthasarathi, L;Cho, MK;Aylward, K;Raab, M;Daxecker, H;O'Dushlaine, CT;Shields, DC;Devocelle, M;Keyes, T;Cosgrave, L;O'Neill, S;Mok, KH;Moran, N
2009
June
ACS chemical biology
Ligand Switching in Cell-Permeable Peptides: Manipulation of the alpha-Integrin Signature Motif
Published
7 ()
Optional Fields
CYTOPLASMIC DOMAIN GLYCOPROTEIN IIB/IIIA KVGFFKR MOTIF ALPHA(IIB)BETA(3) ACTIVATION SUBUNIT PROTEIN TAIL IDENTIFICATION PREDICTION
4
457
471
A synthetic cell-permeable peptide corresponding to the highly conserved alpha-integrin signature motif, Palmityl-K(989)VGFFKR(995) (Pal-FF), induces integrin activation and aggregation in human platelets. Systematic replacement of the F(992)-F(993) with amino acids of greater or lesser hydrophobicity to create Pal-KVGxxKR peptides demonstrate that hydrophobic amino acids (isoleucine, phenylalanine, tyrosine, tryptophan) are essential for agonist potency. In marked contrast, substitution with small and/or hydrophilic amino acids (glycine, alanine, serine) causes a switch in the biological activity resulting in inhibition of platelet aggregation, adhesion, ADP secretion, and thromboxane synthesis. These substituted, hydrophilic peptides are not true pharmacological antagonists, as they actively induce a phosphotyrosine signaling cascade in platelets. Singly substituted peptides (Pal-AF and Pal-FA) cause preferential retention of pro- or anti-thrombotic properties, respectively. Because the alpha-integrin signature motif is an established docking site for a number of diverse cytoplasmic proteins, we conclude that eliminating critical protein-protein interactions mediated through the hydrophobic amino acids, especially F(993), favors an anti-thrombotic pathway in platelets. Agents derived from the inhibitory peptides described in this study may represent a new therapeutic strategy for anti-platelet or anti-integrin drug development.
WASHINGTON
1554-8929
10.1021/cb8002623
Grant Details