Cell-Permeable
Bicyclic Peptide Inhibitors against
Intracellular Proteins
Posted on 2015-12-17 - 03:14
Cyclic peptides have
great potential as therapeutic agents and
research tools but are generally impermeable to the cell membrane.
Fusion of cyclic peptides with a cyclic cell-penetrating peptide produces
bicyclic peptides that are cell-permeable and retain the ability to
recognize specific intracellular targets. Application of this strategy
to protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B and a peptidyl-prolyl cis−trans
isomerase (Pin1) isomerase resulted in potent, selective, proteolytically
stable, and biologically active inhibitors against the enzymes.