Selenomethionine as alternative label to the fluorophore TAMRA when exploiting cell-penetrating peptides as blood-brain barrier shuttles to better mimic the physicochemical properties of the non-labelled peptides

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Selenomethionine as alternative label to the fluorophore TAMRA when exploiting cell-penetrating peptides as blood-brain barrier shuttles to better mimic the physicochemical properties of the non-labelled peptides. / Ýr Þorgeirsdóttir, Dagmar ; Hofman Andersen, Jeppe; Perch-Nielsen, Marcus; Møller, Laura Hyrup; Grønbæk-Thorsen, Freja; Kolberg, Hannah Grønbech; Gammelgaard, Bente; Kristensen, Mie.

In: European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Vol. 183, 106400, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ýr Þorgeirsdóttir, D, Hofman Andersen, J, Perch-Nielsen, M, Møller, LH, Grønbæk-Thorsen, F, Kolberg, HG, Gammelgaard, B & Kristensen, M 2023, 'Selenomethionine as alternative label to the fluorophore TAMRA when exploiting cell-penetrating peptides as blood-brain barrier shuttles to better mimic the physicochemical properties of the non-labelled peptides', European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, vol. 183, 106400. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106400

APA

Ýr Þorgeirsdóttir, D., Hofman Andersen, J., Perch-Nielsen, M., Møller, L. H., Grønbæk-Thorsen, F., Kolberg, H. G., Gammelgaard, B., & Kristensen, M. (2023). Selenomethionine as alternative label to the fluorophore TAMRA when exploiting cell-penetrating peptides as blood-brain barrier shuttles to better mimic the physicochemical properties of the non-labelled peptides. European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 183, [106400]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106400

Vancouver

Ýr Þorgeirsdóttir D, Hofman Andersen J, Perch-Nielsen M, Møller LH, Grønbæk-Thorsen F, Kolberg HG et al. Selenomethionine as alternative label to the fluorophore TAMRA when exploiting cell-penetrating peptides as blood-brain barrier shuttles to better mimic the physicochemical properties of the non-labelled peptides. European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. 2023;183. 106400. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106400

Author

Ýr Þorgeirsdóttir, Dagmar ; Hofman Andersen, Jeppe ; Perch-Nielsen, Marcus ; Møller, Laura Hyrup ; Grønbæk-Thorsen, Freja ; Kolberg, Hannah Grønbech ; Gammelgaard, Bente ; Kristensen, Mie. / Selenomethionine as alternative label to the fluorophore TAMRA when exploiting cell-penetrating peptides as blood-brain barrier shuttles to better mimic the physicochemical properties of the non-labelled peptides. In: European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. 2023 ; Vol. 183.

Bibtex

@article{08554e7833a740ddbd6f9a13967aca61,
title = "Selenomethionine as alternative label to the fluorophore TAMRA when exploiting cell-penetrating peptides as blood-brain barrier shuttles to better mimic the physicochemical properties of the non-labelled peptides",
abstract = "The cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) Tat and penetratin are frequently explored as shuttles for drug delivery across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). CPPs are often labelled with fluorophores for analytical purposes, with 5(6)-carboxytetramethylrhodamine (TAMRA) being a popular choice. However, TAMRA labelling affects the physicochemical properties of the resulting fluorophore-CPP construct when compared to the CPP alone. Selenomethionine (MSe) may be introduced as alternative label, which, due to its small size and amino acid nature, likely results in minimal alterations of the peptide physicochemical properties. With this study we compared, head-to-head, the effect of MSe and TAMRA labelling of Tat and penetratin with respect to their physicochemical properties, and investigated effects hereof on brain capillary endothelial cell (BCEC) models. TAMRA labelling positively affected the ability of the peptides to adhere to the cell membranes as well being internalized into the BCECs when compared to MSe labelling. TAMRA labelling of penetratin added toxicity to the BCECs to a higher extent than TAMRA labelling of Tat, whereas MSe labelling did not affect the cellular viability. Both TAMRA and MSe labelling of penetratin decreased the barrier integrity of BCEC monolayers, but not to an extent that improved transport of the paracellular marker 14C-mannitol. In conclusion, MSe labelling of Tat and penetratin adds minimal alterations to the physicochemical properties of these CPPs and their resulting effects on BCECs, and thereby represents a preferred alternative to TAMRA for peptide quantification purposes.",
author = "{{\'Y}r {\TH}orgeirsd{\'o}ttir}, Dagmar and {Hofman Andersen}, Jeppe and Marcus Perch-Nielsen and M{\o}ller, {Laura Hyrup} and Freja Gr{\o}nb{\ae}k-Thorsen and Kolberg, {Hannah Gr{\o}nbech} and Bente Gammelgaard and Mie Kristensen",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106400",
language = "English",
volume = "183",
journal = "European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences",
issn = "0928-0987",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Selenomethionine as alternative label to the fluorophore TAMRA when exploiting cell-penetrating peptides as blood-brain barrier shuttles to better mimic the physicochemical properties of the non-labelled peptides

AU - Ýr Þorgeirsdóttir, Dagmar

AU - Hofman Andersen, Jeppe

AU - Perch-Nielsen, Marcus

AU - Møller, Laura Hyrup

AU - Grønbæk-Thorsen, Freja

AU - Kolberg, Hannah Grønbech

AU - Gammelgaard, Bente

AU - Kristensen, Mie

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - The cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) Tat and penetratin are frequently explored as shuttles for drug delivery across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). CPPs are often labelled with fluorophores for analytical purposes, with 5(6)-carboxytetramethylrhodamine (TAMRA) being a popular choice. However, TAMRA labelling affects the physicochemical properties of the resulting fluorophore-CPP construct when compared to the CPP alone. Selenomethionine (MSe) may be introduced as alternative label, which, due to its small size and amino acid nature, likely results in minimal alterations of the peptide physicochemical properties. With this study we compared, head-to-head, the effect of MSe and TAMRA labelling of Tat and penetratin with respect to their physicochemical properties, and investigated effects hereof on brain capillary endothelial cell (BCEC) models. TAMRA labelling positively affected the ability of the peptides to adhere to the cell membranes as well being internalized into the BCECs when compared to MSe labelling. TAMRA labelling of penetratin added toxicity to the BCECs to a higher extent than TAMRA labelling of Tat, whereas MSe labelling did not affect the cellular viability. Both TAMRA and MSe labelling of penetratin decreased the barrier integrity of BCEC monolayers, but not to an extent that improved transport of the paracellular marker 14C-mannitol. In conclusion, MSe labelling of Tat and penetratin adds minimal alterations to the physicochemical properties of these CPPs and their resulting effects on BCECs, and thereby represents a preferred alternative to TAMRA for peptide quantification purposes.

AB - The cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) Tat and penetratin are frequently explored as shuttles for drug delivery across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). CPPs are often labelled with fluorophores for analytical purposes, with 5(6)-carboxytetramethylrhodamine (TAMRA) being a popular choice. However, TAMRA labelling affects the physicochemical properties of the resulting fluorophore-CPP construct when compared to the CPP alone. Selenomethionine (MSe) may be introduced as alternative label, which, due to its small size and amino acid nature, likely results in minimal alterations of the peptide physicochemical properties. With this study we compared, head-to-head, the effect of MSe and TAMRA labelling of Tat and penetratin with respect to their physicochemical properties, and investigated effects hereof on brain capillary endothelial cell (BCEC) models. TAMRA labelling positively affected the ability of the peptides to adhere to the cell membranes as well being internalized into the BCECs when compared to MSe labelling. TAMRA labelling of penetratin added toxicity to the BCECs to a higher extent than TAMRA labelling of Tat, whereas MSe labelling did not affect the cellular viability. Both TAMRA and MSe labelling of penetratin decreased the barrier integrity of BCEC monolayers, but not to an extent that improved transport of the paracellular marker 14C-mannitol. In conclusion, MSe labelling of Tat and penetratin adds minimal alterations to the physicochemical properties of these CPPs and their resulting effects on BCECs, and thereby represents a preferred alternative to TAMRA for peptide quantification purposes.

U2 - 10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106400

DO - 10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106400

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36750148

VL - 183

JO - European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences

JF - European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences

SN - 0928-0987

M1 - 106400

ER -

ID: 336761962