Abstract

Efficient intracellular drug delivery and target specificity are often hampered by the presence of biological barriers. Thus, compounds that efficiently cross cell membranes are the key to improving the therapeutic value and on-target specificity of non-permeable drugs. The discovery of cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) and the early design approaches through mimicking the natural penetration domains used by viruses have led to greater efficiency of intracellular delivery. Following these nature-inspired examples, a number of rationally designed CPPs has been developed. In this review, a variety of CPP designs will be described, including linear and flexible, positively charged and often amphipathic CPPs, and more rigid versions comprising cyclic, stapled, or dimeric and/or multivalent, self-assembled peptides or peptido-mimetics. The application of distinct design strategies to known physico-chemical properties of CPPs offers the opportunity to improve their penetration efficiency and/or internalization kinetics. This led to increased design complexity of new CPPs that does not always result in greater CPP activity. Therefore, the transition of CPPs to a clinical setting remains a challenge also due to the concomitant involvement of various internalization routes and heterogeneity of cells used in the in vitro studies.

Highlights

  • Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) are short peptides (

  • Efficient intracellular drug delivery and target specificity are often hampered by the presence of biological barriers

  • The discovery of cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) and the early design approaches through mimicking the natural penetration domains used by viruses have led to greater efficiency of intracellular delivery

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) are short peptides (

Natural and Fusion Sequences
Structural and Functional Plasticity
Internalization Mechanisms
Membrane Composition
Endosomal Escape
Influence of Cargo
Design Strategies
The Importance of the Primary Sequence
Flexible Amphipathic CPPs
Schematic representations helicityat at primary sequence
Rigidity as anasEmerging ininCPP
10 D-amino acids amino acids used in different combinations in apositions
10. Schematic representation
Controlled Self-Assembly
Challenges and Future Perspectives
Findings
Design Approach
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call