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Published October 12, 2022 | Published
Journal Article Open

Medium-Chain Lipid Conjugation Facilitates Cell-Permeability and Bioactivity

  • 1. ROR icon University of California, San Francisco
  • 2. ROR icon New York University
  • 3. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

The majority of bioactive molecules act on membrane proteins or intracellular targets and therefore needs to partition into or cross biological membranes. Natural products often exhibit lipid modifications to facilitate critical molecule–membrane interactions, and in many cases their bioactivity is markedly reduced upon removal of a lipid group. However, despite its importance in nature, lipid-conjugation of small molecules is not commonly used in chemical biology and medicinal chemistry, and the effect of such conjugation has not been systematically studied. To understand the composition of lipids found in natural products, we carried out a chemoinformatic characterization of the “natural product lipidome”. According to this analysis, lipidated natural products predominantly contain saturated medium-chain lipids (MCLs), which are significantly shorter than the long-chain lipids (LCLs) found in membranes and lipidated proteins. To study the usefulness of such modifications in probe design, we systematically explored the effect of lipid conjugation on five different small molecule chemotypes and find that permeability, cellular retention, subcellular localization, and bioactivity can be significantly modulated depending on the type of lipid tail used. We demonstrate that MCL conjugation can render molecules cell-permeable and modulate their bioactivity. With all explored chemotypes, MCL-conjugates consistently exhibited superior uptake or bioactivity compared to LCL-conjugates and either comparable or superior uptake or bioactivity to short-chain lipid (SCL)-conjugates. Together, our findings suggest that conjugation of small molecules with MCLs could be a powerful strategy for the design of probes and drugs.

Copyright and License

Copyright © 2022 American Chemical Society

Additional Information

The Supporting Information is available free of charge. 

  • Additional TMAPs for lipidated NPs; Chemical synthesis and characterization; Additional molecular dynamics simulation details (PDF)

Code Availability

The code used to analyze and visualize the lipidated NPs in COCONUT can be found at https://github.com/reymond-group/LipidatedNPs.

Acknowledgement

J.M. thanks the NCI for a K00 award (K00CA253758). We acknowledge the NYU Langone Health’s Ion Laboratory for conducting electrophysiology experiments. Support for the IonLab is partially provided through the Office of Scientific Research, NIH RO1 AI097302, NIH sub award D009105901 and Nanion Technologies Inc. R.C.V. and B.P. acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation under Grant No. MCB-1817292. We thank Joe O’Connell from Brian Shoichet’s lab for assistance with the DLS measurement. We thank Dr. Kevan M. Shokat, Dr. Paramjit Arora, Dr. D. Matthew Peacock, Dr. Ziyang Zhang, Dr. Kevin Lou, and Siyi Wang for critical comments and helpful discussion.

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Additional details

Created:
August 14, 2024
Modified:
August 14, 2024