Abstract

Proteins are ideal candidates for disease treatment because of their high specificity and potency. Despite this potential, delivery of proteins remains a significant challenge due to the intrinsic size, charge, and stability of proteins. Attempts to overcome these challenges have most commonly relied on direct conjugation of polymers and peptides to proteins via reactive groups on naturally occurring residues. While such approaches have shown some success, they allow limited control of the spacing and number of moieties coupled to proteins, which can hinder bioactivity and delivery capabilities of the therapeutic. Here, we describe a strategy to site-specifically conjugate delivery moieties to therapeutic proteins through unnatural amino acid (UAA) incorporation, in order to explore the effect of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-targeted ligand valency and spacing on internalization of proteins in EGFR-overexpressing inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) cells. Our results demonstrate the ability to enhance targeted protein delivery by tuning a small number of EGFR ligands per protein and clustering these ligands to promote multivalent ligand-receptor interactions. Furthermore, the tailorability of this simple approach was demonstrated through IBC-targeted cell death via the delivery of yeast cytosine deaminase (yCD), a prodrug converting enzyme.

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