Abstract

The backbone cyclic and disulfide bridged sunflower trypsin inhibitor-1 (SFTI-1) peptide is a proven effective scaffold for a range of peptide therapeutics. For production at laboratory scale, solid phase peptide synthesis techniques are widely used, but these synthetic approaches are costly and environmentally taxing at large scale. Here, we developed a plant-based approach for the recombinant production of SFTI-1-based peptide drugs. We show that transient expression in Nicotiana benthamiana allows for rapid peptide production, provided that asparaginyl endopeptidase enzymes with peptide-ligase functionality are co-expressed with the substrate peptide gene. Without co-expression, no target cyclic peptides are detected, reflecting rapid in planta degradation of non-cyclized substrate. We test this recombinant production system by expressing a SFTI-1-based therapeutic candidate that displays potent and selective inhibition of human plasmin. By using an innovative multi-unit peptide expression cassette, we show that in planta yields reach ~60 μg/g dry weight at 6 days post leaf infiltration. Using nuclear magnetic resonance structural analysis and functional in vitro assays, we demonstrate the equivalence of plant and synthetically derived plasmin inhibitor peptide. The methods and insights gained in this study provide opportunities for the large scale, cost effective production of SFTI-1-based therapeutics.

Highlights

  • Beyond its biological role as a plant defense peptide, the 14 amino acid sunflower trypsin inhibitor-1 (SFTI-1) has attracted significant interest in the drug development field (Craik et al, 2006; Lesner et al, 2011)

  • A recombinant production system that provides for posttranslational backbone cyclization of peptides is highly desired

  • SFTI-1 is processed from the PawS1 precursor, which encodes for a seed storage albumin that is exclusively found in seed (Figure 1A) (Mylne et al, 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Beyond its biological role as a plant defense peptide, the 14 amino acid sunflower trypsin inhibitor-1 (SFTI-1) has attracted significant interest in the drug development field (Craik et al, 2006; Lesner et al, 2011). This interest largely stems from the cyclic backbone of SFTI-1, which together with a bridging disulfide bond imparts exceptional stability and conformational rigidity to the peptide (Korsinczky et al, 2001).

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