A Peptide Transdermal
A Peptide Transdermal
A Peptide Transdermal
sible. A culture clash is inevitable: the best ionchannel assay is slow, and existing high-throughput assays do not capture the complexity of most ion channels. What is the solution to this impasse? The paper by Huang et al. describes a method to stimulate ion channelcontaining cells under computer control using external electric field changes while measuring the attendant changes in membrane potential using voltagesensitive dyes and high-speed optical recording. Changes in the external electric field alter the transmembrane potential transiently and thus alter the field experienced by the embedded ion channels. In this way, scientists can cycle ion channels through their various conformational states (Fig. 1) and allow drug candidates access to all these states7,8. Although membrane potential is a complicated nonlinear function of ion channel current, it was found nevertheless that conditions can be adjusted empirically to report the relative degree of inhibition of the channels1,9. Sodium channels, when open, depolarize the cells membrane potential; inhibition of sodium channels by a drug retards this depolarization. In the method of Huang et al., such changes in membrane potential are tracked with optical voltage-dependent dyes and correlated with channel inhibition. The authors show that the experimental conditions can be adapted (by changing the frequency of stimulation) to optimize characterization of particular drugs. Furthermore, because the method of interrogating membrane potential is optical, it can be carried out with very high throughput. The approach permits detection of different mechanisms of ion channel inhibition and can distinguish between use-dependent inhibitors7,8, such as lidocaine, and toxins such as tetrodotoxin from the Japanese puffer fish. This is important because drugs have different use-dependent kinetics (that is, different association/dissociation rates), and drugs that affect the channel in a use-dependent manner and have appropriate kinetics are believed to be safer than very slowly dissociating (non-use-dependent) toxins. This is quite exciting indeed. The method is not without limitations, however. First, it does not control membrane potential as in the voltage clamp method; it merely causes it to change. Second, the approach relies on the intrinsic excitability of cells; that is, the response of a cell will depend on the various combinations of ion channels in the membrane. This will differ with different cell types and cannot be fully controlled. Nevertheless, the approach of Huang et al. to retask an age-old approach in the service of drug discovery opens significant new opportunities for identifying ion channelmodulating drugs.
1. Huang, C.-J. et al. Nat. Biotechnol. 23, 389396 (2006). 2. Galvani L. De Bononiensi Scientiarum et Artium Instituto atque Academia Commentarii. 7:363-418 (1791). 3. Huxley, A.L. & Hodgkin, A.F. J. Physiol. 116, 424448 (1952a). 4. Neher, E. & Sakmann, B. Nature 260, 799802 (1976). 5. Hamill, O.P., Marty, A., Neher, E., Sakmann, B. & Sigworth, F.J. Pflugers Arch. 391, 85100 (1981). 6. Doyle, D.A. et al. Science 280, 6977 (1998). 7. Hondeghem, L.M. & Katzung, B.G. Annu. Rev. Pharmacol. Toxicol. 24, 387423 (1984). 8. Hille, B. J. Gen. Physiol. 69, 497515 (1977). 9. Burnett, P. et al. J. Biomol. Screen 8, 660667 (2003).
Mark R. Prausnitz is at the School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia 30332-0100, USA. e-mail: prausnitz@gatech.edu
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a
Stratum corneum Viable epidermis
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iii
Dermis
Dermis
Screening round 1
Amplify
Screening round 2
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Increase serum insulin Decrease blood glucose
Bob Crimi
Peptide
Insulin
Figure 1 Phage-display screening to discover peptides that overcome skins barrier. (a) Transdermal delivery is limited largely by skins outer layer of stratum corneum. (i) Drugs from conventional patches follow a tortuous path, diffusing around cells within the lipid-rich extracellular matrix of stratum corneum. (ii) Transport directly across stratum corneum does not usually occur in intact skin. (iii) Diffusion via hair follicles is thought to be insignificant under normal circumstances. However, the peptide-enhanced insulin delivery demonstrated by Chen et al. appears to follow this pathway. (b) To find novel peptide enhancers, Chen et al. placed a phage display peptide library on the skin of nude mice. Phage that crossed the skin were harvested from the blood and amplified for a second round of in vivo selection. Sequencing of phage collected after the second screening yielded an optimal peptide that, when coadministered with insulin, increased serum insulin and decreased blood glucose levels in diabetic rats.
obsolete. This prospect is what makes finding a peptide chaperone for transdermal delivery such an exciting advance.
1. Chen, Y. et al. Nat. Biotechnol. 23, 405410 (2006). 2. Prausnitz, M.R., Mitragotri, S. & Langer, R. Nat. Rev. Drug Discov. 3, 115124 (2004). 3. Karande, P., Jain, A. & Mitragotri, S. Nat. Biotechnol. 22, 192197 (2004).
4. Kalia, Y.N., Naik, A., Garrison, J. & Guy, R.H. Adv. Drug Deliv. Rev. 56, 619658 (2004). 5. Lavon, I. & Kost, J. Drug Discov. Today 9, 670676 (2004). 6. Dean, H.J. Expert Opin. Drug Deliv. 2, 227236 (2005). 7. Prausnitz, M.R. Adv. Drug Deliv. Rev. 56, 581587 (2004). 8. Bramson, J. et al. Gene Ther. 10, 251260 (2003).
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