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Human endothelial-specific targeting peptides were identified by biopanning within freshly-obtained human umbilical cords. Umbilical veins were cleaned in situ and M13 phage display libraries were passed through the cords. Tightly bound phage were recovered following isolation of endothelial cells by collagenase digestion and homogenisation, allowing production of enriched phage libraries for subsequent rounds of panning. After five rounds of biopanning, five promising sequences were selected and the binding of the corresponding phage clones was compared in perfused umbilical veins. Each of these peptides showed substantial binding, although the clone encoding the heptapeptide KPSGLTY showed the greatest, some 89-times greater than insertless phage. Binding of this phage clone was examined to cells in vitro, where it demonstrated at least five-times greater binding to isolated human umbilical vein endothelial cells than to 911, SKOV3, B16F10 and Cos7 cells. These initial peptides may prove useful targeting agents for endothelial-selective delivery, and this powerful approach should be readily applicable to biopanning in a broad range of human vessels ex vivo.

Original publication

DOI

10.1080/1061186031000086063

Type

Journal article

Journal

J Drug Target

Publication Date

01/2003

Volume

11

Pages

53 - 59

Keywords

Animals, Bacteriophages, COS Cells, Cells, Cultured, Chlorocebus aethiops, Endothelium, Vascular, Female, Humans, Melanoma, Experimental, Mice, Oligopeptides, Peptide Library, Perfusion, Pregnancy, Protein Binding, Sequence Analysis, Protein, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Umbilical Veins