Peptoid-Based Reprogrammable Template for Cell-Permeable Inhibitors of Protein–Protein Interactions

05 May 2021, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The development of inhibitors of intracellular protein–protein interactions (PPIs) is of great significance for drug discovery, but the generation of a cell-permeable molecule with high affinity to protein is challenging. Oligo(N-substituted glycines) (oligo-NSGs), referred to as peptoids, are attractive as potential intracellular PPI inhibitors owing to their high membrane permeability. However, their intrinsically flexible backbones make the rational design of inhibitors difficult. Here, we propose a peptoid-based rational approach to develop cell-permeable PPI inhibitors using oligo(N-substituted alanines) (oligo-NSAs). The rigid structures of oligo-NSAs enable independent optimization of each N-substituent to improve binding affinity and membrane permeability, while preserving the backbone shape. A molecule with optimized N-substituents inhibited a target PPI in cells, which demonstrated the utility of oligo-NSA as a reprogrammable template to develop intracellular PPI inhibitors.

Keywords

Peptoids
Peptidomimetics
Protein–protein interactions (PPIs)
Conformationally constrained oligomers

Supplementary materials

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