Multivalent,
Soluble Nano-Self Peptides Increase Phagocytosis
of Antibody-Opsonized Targets while Suppressing “Self”
Signaling
Posted on 2020-11-13 - 19:05
Macrophages engulf “foreign”
cells and particles,
but phagocytosis of healthy cells and cancer cells is inhibited by
expression of the ubiquitous membrane protein CD47 which binds SIRPα
on macrophages to signal “self”. Motivated by some clinical
efficacy of anti-CD47 against liquid tumors and based on past studies
of CD47-derived polypeptides on particles that inhibited phagocytosis
of the particles, here we design soluble, multivalent peptides to
bind and block SIRPα. Bivalent and tetravalent nano-Self peptides
prove more potent (Keff ∼ 10 nM)
than monovalent 8-mers as agonists for phagocytosis of antibody opsonized
cells, including cancer cells. Multivalent peptides also outcompete
soluble CD47 binding to human macrophages, consistent with SIRPα
binding, and the peptides suppress phosphotyrosine in macrophages,
consistent with inhibition of SIRPα's “self”
signaling.
Peptides exhibit minimal folding, but functionality suggests an induced
fit into SIRPα’s binding pocket. Pre-clinical studies
in mice indicate safety, with no anemia that typifies clinical infusions
of anti-CD47. Multivalent nano-Self peptides thus constitute an alternative
approach to promoting phagocytosis of “self”, including
cancer cells targeted clinically.
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Jalil, AbdelAziz
R.; Hayes, Brandon H.; Andrechak, Jason C.; Xia, Yuntao; Chenoweth, David M.; Discher, Dennis E. (2020). Multivalent,
Soluble Nano-Self Peptides Increase Phagocytosis
of Antibody-Opsonized Targets while Suppressing “Self”
Signaling. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.0c05091