Abstract

This paper compares covalent and non-covalent approaches for the organisation of ligand arrays to bind integrins. In the covalent strategy, linear RGD peptides are conjugated to first and second generation dendrons, and using a fluorescence polarisation competition assay, the first generation compound is demonstrated to show the most effective integrin binding, with an EC(50) of 125 μM (375 μM per peptide unit). As such, this dendritic compound is significantly more effective than a monovalent ligand, which does not bind integrin, even at concentrations as high as 1 mM. However, the second generation compound is significantly less effective, demonstrating that there is an optimum ligand density for multivalency in this case. In the non-covalent approach to multivalency, the same RGD peptide is functionalised with a hydrophobic C12 chain, giving rise to a lipopeptide which is demonstrated to be capable of self-assembly. This lipopeptide is capable of effective integrin binding at concentrations of 200 μM. These results therefore demonstrate that covalent (dendritic) and non-covalent (micellar self-assembly) approaches have, in this case, comparable efficiency in terms of achieving multivalent organisation of a ligand array.

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