A Hepatitis B Virus-derived Human Hepatic Cell-specific Heparin-binding Peptide: Identification and Application to a Drug Delivery System


Authors: Q. Liu, M. Somiya, M. Iijima, K. Tatematsu and S. Kuroda

Journal: Biomaterials Science

DOI: 10.1039/C8BM01134F

Publication - Abstract

April 12, 2018

Abstract

Viruses are naturally evolved nanocarriers that can evade host immune systems, attach specifically to the surfaces of target cells, enter the cells through endocytosis, escape from endosomes efficiently, and then transfer their genomes to host cells. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a ∼42 nm enveloped DNA virus that can specifically infect human hepatic cells. To utilize the HBV-derived early infection machinery in synthetic nanocarriers, the human hepatic cell-binding site (i.e., the sodium taurocholate co-transporting polypeptide (NTCP)-binding site, with myristoylated pre-S1(2–47)) and the low pH-dependent fusogenic domain (pre-S1(9–24)) are indispensable for targeting and endosomal escape, respectively. However, cell-surface NTCP has recently been shown not to be involved in the initial attachment of HBV. In this study, we identified a novel heparin-binding site (pre-S1(30–42)) in the N-terminal half of the pre-S1 region, which presumably interacts with cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) and plays a pivotal role in the initial attachment of HBV to human hepatic cells. The evolutionarily conserved amino acid residues Asp-31, Trp-32, and Asp-33 are indispensable for the heparin-binding activity. Liposomes (LPs) displaying the peptide were endocytosed by human hepatic cells in a cell-surface heparin-dependent manner and delivered doxorubicin to human hepatic cells more efficiently than myristoylated pre-S1(2–47)-displaying LPs. These results demonstrated that the pre-S1(30–42) peptide is the most promising HBV-derived targeting peptide for synthetic nanocarriers, and that this peptide exhibits high specificity for human hepatic cells and efficiently induces endocytosis.

Advanced Search

close
  • Publications
  • Application Notes
  • Posters
  • Workshops
  • Videos & Webinars
  • Articles
Search

Browse by Category

  • Application
    • Diagnostic and Imaging
    • Genetic Medicine
    • Hematology
    • Metabolic Disorders
    • Neuroscience
    • Oncology
    • Skeletal Disorders
    • Targeted Drug Delivery
    • Vaccines
    • Other Applications
    • Cell therapy
  • Formulation
    • Liposomes
    • Nucleic Acid Lipid Nanoparticles
    • Polymeric Nanoparticles
    • Other Formulations
  • Payload
    • DNA
    • microRNA
    • mRNA
    • siRNA
    • Small Molecule Drugs
    • Other Payloads


related content

Publication - Abstract

Amphiphilic Poly(α)glutamate Polymeric Micelles for Systemic Administration of siRNA to Tumors

A. Krivitsky, D. Polyak, A. Scomparin, S. Eliyahu, P. Ofek, G. Tiram, H. Kalinski, S. Avkin-Nachum, N.F. Gracia, L. Albertazzi and R. Satchi-Fainaro

RNAi therapeutics carried a great promise to the area of personalized medicine: the ability to target “undruggable” oncogenic pathways. Nevertheless, their efficient tumor targeting via systemic administration had not been resolved yet. Amphiphilic alkylated poly(&alp...
Read More


Publication - Abstract

Rational Design of Adjuvants for Subunit Vaccines: The Format of Cationic Adjuvants Affects the Induction of Antigen-specific Antibody Responses

G. Anderluzzi, S.T. Schmidt, R. Cunliffe, S. Woods, C.W. Roberts, D. Veggi, I. Ferlenghi, D.T. O'Hagan, B.C. Baudner and Y. Perrie

Read More


Sign Up and Stay Informed
Sign up today to automatically receive new Precision NanoSystems application notes, conference posters, relevant science publications, and webinar invites.