Yale Bulletin and Calendar

April 21, 2006|Volume 34, Number 27|Two-Week Issue


BULLETIN HOME

VISITING ON CAMPUS

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

IN THE NEWS

BULLETIN BOARD

CLASSIFIED ADS


SEARCH ARCHIVES

DEADLINES

DOWNLOAD FORMS

BULLETIN STAFF


PUBLIC AFFAIRS HOME

NEWS RELEASES

E-MAIL US


YALE HOME PAGE


Peptide that functions like a nanosyringe
offers new tool for drug delivery

Scientists at Yale and the University of Rhode Island report the development of a peptide that can specifically and directly deliver molecules to the inside of cells like a nanosyringe, creating a new tool for drug delivery, gene control and imaging of diseased tissues.

Their "cargo carrier" peptide, called pHLIP, for pH (Low) Insertion Peptide, accumulates in the membranes of cells in acidic environments and spontaneously transfers attached molecules across the membrane. The cargo is then released by cleavage of a sulfur-sulfur bond that is only unstable if it is inside the cell. The study, published early online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, was led by Donald M. Engelman, professor of molecular biophysics and biochemistry at Yale.

"Our system offers a new technology for the fast and efficient delivery of drugs, imaging probes, or cell and gene regulation agents into living cells," says Engelman. "pHLIP may provide a new approach for imaging, diagnosis and treatment of diseases with naturally occurring or artificially created low-pH extracellular environments, such as tumors, infarcts, stroke-afflicted tissue, atherosclerotic lesions, sites of inflammation or infection, or damaged tissue resulting from trauma."

Normal cells are surrounded by an environment with a constant pH of about 7.4, while tumor cells and sites of inflammation actively pump protons out and create an acid extracellular pH of 5.5 to 6.5.

The study shows that pHLIP entry into the cell membrane and the translocation of molecules into cells are not mediated by the usual entry pathways -- endocytosis, interactions with cell receptors or by formation of pores in cell membranes.

"By translocating a molecule into a cell and releasing it in the cytoplasm, pHLIP functions, in effect, as a nanosyringe," according to Engelman. "The peptide does not exhibit any of this structure in solution or on the cell membrane at neutral pH. However, at low pH it becomes rigid like a syringe needle, inserts into a cell membrane, and injects molecules into cells.

Drug or dye molecules can be linked by sulfur-sulfur bonds to pHLIP. This paper demonstrates the effectiveness of pHLIP with a cargo of fluorescently tagged phalloidin, a toxin from the deadly Amanita phalloides mushroom that normally cannot enter cells. Inside the cells, phalloidin binds to actin molecules and "freezes" the cellular skeleton, giving a distinct visual pattern under the microscope.

First authors of the paper, Yana K. Reshetnyak and her husband Oleg A. Andreev, are assistant professors of physics at the University of Rhode Island and research affiliates at Yale; author Ursula Lehnart was a post-doctoral fellow at Yale. Reshetnyak pioneered work with this mechanism of molecule delivery as a post-doctoral fellow in membrane biophysics at Yale with Engelman.

This research was supported in part by grants from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, the U.S. Department of Defense, the National Center for Research Resources and a Research Development Grant from the Council for Research, University of Rhode Island.

The Yale Office of Cooperative Research manages intellectual assets created at Yale and a patent application covering this subject matter has been filed. Further information is available through ocr@yale.edu or at www.yale.edu/ocr.


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

University will review its Special Student Program

Thirteen are honored for their work promoting town-gown cooperation

Hu's speech to be broadcast, web-streamed

A lesson in egg-drop engineering

YALE & CHINA: HISTORIC TIES, EXPANDING PARTNERSHIPS

Symposium honors centennial of astronomy researcher

UAE minister speaks with Yale officials, students . . .

Foreign-language and self-guided audio tours of Yale campus . . .

Research demonstrates that neurons in brain communicate . . .

Symposium on 'Rethinking Historicism' honors Annabel Patterson

Peptide that functions like a nanosyringe offers new tool for drug delivery

Research clarifies how animals perceive environmental odors

In Memoriam: William Sloane Coffin Jr.

Graduating nursing student awarded Nightingale Scholarship

Yale Opera production will feature works by German composers

Next Dean's Workshop will explore flow cytometry research

Center to mark anniversary of city's Holocaust Memorial

Five-year grant supports surgeon's work to develop . . .

Event to celebrate students' written stories about their nursing experiences

Campus Notes

Correction


Bulletin Home|Visiting on Campus|Calendar of Events|In the News

Bulletin Board|Classified Ads|Search Archives|Deadlines

Bulletin Staff|Public Affairs|News Releases| E-Mail Us|Yale Home