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MiniAp‐4: A Venom‐Inspired Peptidomimetic for Brain Delivery
Authors:Dr. Benjamí Oller‐Salvia  Dr. Macarena Sánchez‐Navarro  Sonia Ciudad  Marc Guiu  Pol Arranz‐Gibert  Cristina Garcia  Dr. Roger R. Gomis  Prof. Roméo Cecchelli  Dr. Jesús García  Prof. Ernest Giralt  Dr. Meritxell Teixidó
Affiliation:1. Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona), The Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology, Baldiri Reixac, 10, 08028 Barcelona (Spain);2. ICREA (Spain);3. University of Artois, Faculté Jean Perrin, Jean Souvraz—SP 18, 62307 Lens (France);4. University of Barcelona, Department of Organic Chemistry (Spain)
Abstract:Drug delivery across the blood–brain barrier (BBB) is a formidable challenge for therapies targeting the central nervous system. Although BBB shuttle peptides enhance transport into the brain non‐invasively, their application is partly limited by lability to proteases. The present study proposes the use of cyclic peptides derived from venoms as an affordable way to circumvent this drawback. Apamin, a neurotoxin from bee venom, was minimized by reducing its complexity, toxicity, and immunogenicity, while preserving brain targeting, active transport, and protease resistance. Among the analogues designed, the monocyclic lactam‐bridged peptidomimetic MiniAp‐4 was the most permeable. This molecule is capable of translocating proteins and nanoparticles in a human‐cell‐based BBB model. Furthermore, MiniAp‐4 can efficiently deliver a cargo across the BBB into the brain parenchyma of mice.
Keywords:apamin  blood–  brain barrier  drug delivery  peptides
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