Published October 13, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Inhibition of FOXP3 by stapled alpha-helical peptides dampens regulatory T cell function

Description

Despite continuing advances in the development of novel cellular-, antibody-, and chemotherapeutic-based strategies to enhance immune reactivity, the presence of regulatory T cells (Treg cells) remains a complicating factor for their clinical efficacy. To overcome dosing limitations and off-target effects from antibody-based Treg cell deletional strategies or small molecule drugging, we investigated the ability of hydrocarbon stapled alpha-helical (SAH) peptides to target FOXP3, the master transcription factor regulator of Treg cell development, maintenance, and suppressive function. Using the crystal structure of the FOXP3 homodimer as a guide, we developed SAHs in the likeness of a portion of the native FOXP3 antiparallel coiled-coil homodimerization domain (SAH-FOXP3) to block this key FOXP3 protein-protein interaction (PPI) through molecular mimicry. We describe the design, synthesis, and biochemical evaluation of single- and double-stapled SAHs covering the entire coiled-coil expanse. We show that lead SAH-FOXP3s bind FOXP3, are cell permeable and nontoxic to T cells, induce dose-dependent transcript and protein level alterations of FOXP3 target genes, impede Treg cell function, and lead to Treg cell gene expression changes in vivo consistent with FOXP3 dysfunction. These results demonstrate a proof of concept for rationally designed FOXP3-directed peptide therapeutics that could be used as approaches to amplify endogenous immune responsiveness.

Data availability

The RNA sequencing data that support the findings in this study are available in the National Center for Biotechnology Information Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) and are accessible through accession No. GSE201116.
RNAseq data have been deposited in NCBI GEO (GSE201116) (76).

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2209044119
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:9546

Funding

Cancer Center
P30CA014599
American Cancer Society
Hyundai Hope on Wheels
Lois R. and Maurice J. Beznos
University of Chicago
Cancer Biology training grant
National Institutes of Health
T32CA009594
University of Chicago
Medical Science Training Program
National Institutes of Health
F30 fellowship
National Institutes of Health
R35CA197583
National Institutes of Health
R50CA211399

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division, Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering
Department(s)
Pediatrics