epidermal-growth-factor and octaarginine

epidermal-growth-factor has been researched along with octaarginine* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for epidermal-growth-factor and octaarginine

ArticleYear
siRNA and pharmacological inhibition of endocytic pathways to characterize the differential role of macropinocytosis and the actin cytoskeleton on cellular uptake of dextran and cationic cell penetrating peptides octaarginine (R8) and HIV-Tat.
    Journal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society, 2012, Jul-10, Volume: 161, Issue:1

    Cell penetrating peptides (CPPs) have been extensively studied as vectors for cellular delivery of therapeutic macromolecules. It is widely accepted that they can enter cells directly across the plasma membrane but also gain access through endocytic pathways that are yet to be fully defined. Here we developed siRNA methods in epithelial cell lines, HeLa and A431, to inhibit endocytic pathways regulated by clathrin heavy chain, flotillin-1, caveolin-1, dynamin-2 and Pak-1. In each case, functional uptake assays were developed to characterize the requirement for these proteins, and the pathways they regulate, in the internalisation of defined endocytic probes and also the CPPs octaarginine and HIV-Tat. Peptide uptake was only inhibited in A431 cells depleted of the macropinocytosis regulator Pak-1, but experimental variables including choice of cell line, pharmacological inhibitor, macropinocytic probe and serum starvation significantly influence our ability to assess and assign this pathway as an important route for CPP uptake. Actin disruption with Cytochalasin D inhibited peptide entry in both cell lines but the effects of this agent on dextran uptake was cell line dependent, reducing uptake in HeLa cells and increasing uptake in A431 cells. This was further supported in experiments inducing actin stabilisation by Jasplakinolide, emphasising that the actin cytoskeleton can both promote and hinder endocytosis. Overall the data identify important aspects regarding the comparative mechanisms of CPP uptake and macropinocytosis, and accentuate the significant methodological challenges of studying this pathway as an endocytic portal and an entry route for drug delivery vectors.

    Topics: Actin Cytoskeleton; Amino Acid Sequence; Caveolin 1; Cell Line, Tumor; Cell-Penetrating Peptides; Dextrans; Endocytosis; Epidermal Growth Factor; Gene Products, tat; HeLa Cells; HIV; Humans; Membrane Proteins; Molecular Sequence Data; Oligopeptides; p21-Activated Kinases; Pinocytosis; RNA, Small Interfering; Signal Transduction

2012