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A high-throughput microfluidic mechanoporation platform to enable intracellular delivery of cyclic peptides in cell-based assays.

Authors :
Kasper SH
Otten S
Squadroni B
Orr-Terry C
Kuang Y
Mussallem L
Ge L
Yan L
Kannan S
Verma CS
Brown CJ
Johannes CW
Lane DP
Chandramohan A
Partridge AW
Roberts LR
Josien H
Therien AG
Hett EC
Howell BJ
Peier A
Ai X
Cassaday J
Source :
Bioengineering & translational medicine [Bioeng Transl Med] 2023 May 13; Vol. 8 (5), pp. e10542. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 May 13 (Print Publication: 2023).
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Cyclic peptides are poised to target historically difficult to drug intracellular protein-protein interactions, however, their general cell impermeability poses a challenge for characterizing function. Recent advances in microfluidics have enabled permeabilization of the cytoplasmic membrane by physical cell deformation (i.e., mechanoporation), resulting in intracellular delivery of impermeable macromolecules in vector- and electrophoretic-free approaches. However, the number of payloads (e.g., peptides) and/or concentrations delivered via microfluidic mechanoporation is limited by having to pre-mix cells and payloads, a manually intensive process. In this work, we show that cells are momentarily permeable ( t <subscript>1/2</subscript>  = 1.1-2.8 min) after microfluidic vortex shedding (μVS) and that lower molecular weight macromolecules can be cytosolically delivered upon immediate exposure after cells are processed/permeabilized. To increase the ability to screen peptides, we built a system, dispensing-microfluidic vortex shedding (DμVS), that integrates a μVS chip with inline microplate-based dispensing. To do so, we synced an electronic pressure regulator, flow sensor, on/off dispense valve, and an x-y motion platform in a software-driven feedback loop. Using this system, we were able to deliver low microliter-scale volumes of transiently mechanoporated cells to hundreds of wells on microtiter plates in just several minutes (e.g., 96-well plate filled in <2.5 min). We validated the delivery of an impermeable peptide directed at MDM2, a negative regulator of the tumor suppressor p53, using a click chemistry- and NanoBRET-based cell permeability assay in 96-well format, with robust delivery across the full plate. Furthermore, we demonstrated that DμVS could be used to identify functional, low micromolar, cellular activity of otherwise cell-inactive MDM2-binding peptides using a p53 reporter cell assay in 96- and 384-well format. Overall, DμVS can be combined with downstream cell assays to investigate intracellular target engagement in a high-throughput manner, both for improving structure-activity relationship efforts and for early proof-of-biology of non-optimized peptide (or potentially other macromolecular) tools.<br />Competing Interests: All authors that are present or former employees of Merck Sharp & Dohme LLC, a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, NJ or MSD International, Singapore may hold stocks and/or stock options in Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, NJ. Srinivasaraghavan Kannan and Chandra S. Verma are co‐founders of Sinopsee Therapeutics and Aplomex; the current work does not have a conflict.<br /> (© 2023 Merck Sharp & Dohme LLC and The Authors. Bioengineering & Translational Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Institute of Chemical Engineers.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2380-6761
Volume :
8
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Bioengineering & translational medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37693049
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/btm2.10542