Improved Synthesis Strategy for Peptide Nucleic Acids (PNA) appropriate for Cell-specific Fluorescence Imaging
Abstract
Progress in genomics and proteomics attended to the door for better understanding the
recent rapid expanding complex research field of metabolomics. This trend in biomedical
research increasingly focuses to the development of patient-specific therapeutic approaches
with higher efficiency and sustainability. Simultaneously undesired adverse reactions are
avoided. In parallel, the development of molecules for molecular imaging is required not only
for the imaging of morphological structures but also for the imaging of metabolic processes
like the aberrant expression of the cysteine protease cathepsin B (CtsB) gene and the activity
of the resulting product associated with metastasis and invasiveness of malign tumors. Finally
the objective is to merge imaging and therapy at the same level. The design of molecules which
fulfil these responsibilities is pivotal and requires proper chemical methodologies. In this
context our modified solid phase peptide chemistry using temperature shifts during synthesis
is considered as an appropriate technology. We generated highly variable conjugates which
consist of molecules useful as diagnostically and therapeutically active molecules. As an example the modular PNA products with the complementary sequence to the CtsB mRNA and
additionally with a cathepsin B cleavage site had been prepared as functional modules for
distinction of cell lines with different CtsB gene expression. After ligation to the modular
peptide-based BioShuttle carrier, which was utilized to facilitate the delivery of the functional
modules into the cells’ cytoplasm, the modules were scrutinized.