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Original Article

Evaluating the translocation properties of a new nuclear targeted penetrating peptide using two fluorescent markers

, , , , &
Pages 444-452 | Received 04 Nov 2014, Accepted 24 Dec 2014, Published online: 22 Jan 2015
 

Abstract

Human-derived cell penetrating peptides (CPPs) have attracted much more attentions than other CPPs which are limited by their potential toxicity and immunogenicity. Previously, we identified a novel human-originated CPP (named heparin-binding domain (HBD) in this article), which derived from the C-terminus of human extracellular superoxide dismutase, and demonstrated HBD is an efficient vector for delivering exogenous drug molecules such as apoptin into HeLa cells. In this study, we found this novel CPP showed differentiated efficiency in several tested cell lines. Heparin competitive inhibition experiment and heparanase pre-incubation experiment showed cell surface polysaccharides play an important role for the transmembrane transport. The results of endocytosis inhibitors suggested that HBD penetrates the cell membrane via a direct translocation, which is different from that of TAT, a classical clathrin-mediated endocytosis. HBD could deliver up to 90 kD protein cargoes into cells. Different conjugated modes with cargo molecules greatly affect their translocation efficiency. HBD also showed significant nuclear transport capacity when it was incubated with HeLa cells. Furthermore, the core region for HBD possessing membrane-penetrating ability was identified by deletion analyses. These results would be helpful for developing HBD as a new nuclear delivery tool for therapeutic biomolecules.

Declaration of interest

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 81171449). The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of this article.

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