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Biased Equilibrium Drives Cyclosporine Membrane Permeability: The Goldilocks Energy Barriers

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posted on 2025-03-13, 06:05 authored by Miranda N. Limbach, Edward T. Lindberg, Cynthiya Shrestha, Jinchao Lou, Carlos A. Steren, Michael D. Best, Thanh D. Do
Conformational flexibility allows macrocyclic peptides like cyclosporine A (CycA) to cross membranes, yet drug design leveraging this property has largely failed. A key challenge is linking specific conformers to function, as different conformers govern permeability versus target binding. We reveal a mechanism that enhances CycA and alisporivir (ALI) permeability: trans-to-cis isomerization at MeVal11–MeBmt1 creates conformers that remain “soluble” in both membrane-like and aqueous environments. A biased equilibrium favors this conformer in protic environments, while a lipophilic conformer with cis MeLeu9–MeLeu10 dominates in aprotic conditions. This mechanism explains why CycH, Valspodar (VALSPO), and O-acetyl CycA (OAc-CycA) fail to cross membranesthey adopt similar states but lack this biased equilibrium. Our findings provide a new strategy for designing membrane-permeable N-methylated macrocycles and underscore the role of high-energy conformers as transition states between membrane permeability and target engagementoffering critical insights for drug development.

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