Mechanism of cellular uptake of HIV-TAT peptide & effects of TAT-SOD against ultraviolet induced skin damage
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Chen, Xiaochao
Abstract
TAT peptide is one of the best-characterised cell penetrating peptides (CPPs)
derived from the transactivator of transcription protein from the human
immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1). TAT peptide is able to cross the cell
membrane and deliver various biomolecules into cells with low
immunogenicity and no toxicity. However, the exact mechanism of
internalization still remains a subject of controversy. Lamellar neutron
scattering was used to determine the location of TAT peptide in the negativelycharged
phospholipids bilayers. The results reveal two locations, one in the
peripheral aqueous phase between the adjacent bilayers and the second one
below the glycerol backbone region of the lipid bilayer. A concentrationindependent
membrane thinning above a peptide concentration threshold
(1mol%) and a contiguous transbilayer water channel at the largest peptide
concentration (10mol%) were also found. This evidence led to the suggestion
that the toroidal pore model might be involved in the transmembrane
mechanism at high peptide concentration. Another set of neutron diffraction
experiments examined the interaction between the TAT peptide and neutral
phospholipids showed that TAT peptide preferentially intercalated into the
hydrophobic core and the glycerol backbone region of the neutral lipid bilayer
at the lowest peptide concentration investigated (0.1mol%), indicating that the
insertion did not require negatively-charged phospholipids. There was also
clear evidence for the concentration-dependent reorientation of TAT peptide.
A plasmid containing the human copper-zinc SOD gene linked with the coding
sequence for a 11-aa HIV-TAT peptide (pGEX-TAT-SOD, 513bp) was
constructed and used to express a recombinant fusion protein in Escherichia
coli strain BL21 (DE3). High-level expression of TAT-SOD soluble protein
with a GST tag (44-kDa) was achieved under optimal expression conditions
and a small-scale glutathione affinity column or large-scale ion-exchange
chromatography used for its purification. The potential protective effect of
TAT-SOD against UV-induced cell damage was studied on UVC-irradiated
MDCK epithelial cells.
Before any further clinical study, the UV full-length absorption of TAT-SOD
protein was measured. The results showed the potential UV protective effect of
TAT-SOD was not due to the physical absorption of UV irradiation.
In a preclinical study with five healthy volunteers, the penetration of TAT-SOD
through human stratum corneum on the inner upper arm was identified by the
tape stripping and specific SOD activity analysis. Significant increases on SOD
activity were found on the outer layers of stratum corneum in TAT-SOD treated
group, compared to placebo treated control, indicating that the TAT peptide
assisted SOD to penetrate into the human stratum corneum.
In a clinical study with ten healthy volunteers, eight showed a significant
increase of minimal erythema dose (MED) with TAT-SOD pre-treatment. The
median blood flow value of ten subjects at the UVB-irradiated site decreased
with TAT-SOD pretreatment. Taken together, this evidence showed that TATvi
SOD did have a marked protective effect against UVB induced skin damage.
In a second clinical study, five healthy volunteers were challenged with a series
of UVB doses. Skin punch biopsies were taken from four test sites on the lower
back for H&E and immunohistochemical staining analysis. UVB-induced
apoptotic sunburn cell (SBC) formation, p53 up-regulation and thymine dimer
formation in epidermis were not attenuated by pretreatment with TAT-SOD.
These data suggest that transdermal superoxide scavenger TAT-SOD reduced
the UVB-induced inflammation, but did not abrogate the direct DNA damage
of UVB irradiation on the skin. However, the hope of TAT-SOD could reduce
UVA indirect DNA damage remains.
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