Glucose-Lipopeptide Conjugates Reveal the Role of Glucose Modification Position in Complexation and the Potential of Malignant Melanoma Therapy

  • Xinxin Zhao
  • , Peng Zhang*
  • , Yaqi Li
  • , Saizhi Wu
  • , Fengjiao Li
  • , Ying Wang
  • , Songping Liang
  • , Xiao He
  • , Youlin Zeng*
  • , Zhonghua Liu*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Glycosylation and fatty acid modification are promising strategies to improve peptide performance. We previously studied glycosylation and fatty acid modification of the anticancer peptide R-lycosin-I. In this study, we further investigated the co-modification of fatty acids and monosaccharides in R-lycosin-I. A glucose derivative was covalently coupled to the ϵ-amino group of the Lys residues of the lipopeptide R-C12, which was derived from R-lycosin-I modified with dodecanoic acid, and obtained seven glycolipid peptides. They exhibited different cytotoxicity profiles, which may be related to the changes in physicochemical properties and binding ability to glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1). Among them, R-C12-4 exhibited the highest cytotoxicity and improved selectivity. A further study demonstrated that R-C12-4 showed significant cytotoxicity and antimetastasis activity in murine melanoma cells, melanoma spheroids, and animal models. Our results indicated that the glucose derivative modification position plays important roles in glucose-lipopeptide conjugates, and R-C12-4 might be a promising lead for developing anticancer drugs.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)11483-11495
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of Medicinal Chemistry
Volume64
Issue number15
DOIs
StatePublished - 12 Aug 2021

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